Inhibition of CD8+ T Cell–Derived CD40 Signals Is Necessary but Not Sufficient for Foxp3+ Induced Regulatory T Cell Generation In Vivo

2013 
Current models of CD4 + T cell help suggest a major role for CD154 binding to CD40 expressed on dendritic cells, with a lesser role for direct T:T interactions via CD40 expressed on CD8 + T cells. However, the contribution of CD8 + T cell–derived CD40 signals during the donor-reactive T cell response to a transplant has never been studied. In this study, we examined the graft-rejection kinetics and CD4 + and CD8 + donor-reactive T cell responses under conditions in which CD40 was genetically ablated only on APC, as well as under conditions in which CD40 was genetically ablated only on donor-reactive CD8 + T cells. Our results revealed a significant role for CD8 + T cell–expressed CD40 in the augmentation of donor-reactive CD8 + T cell responses following transplantation and showed that CD40 expressed on CD8 + T cells must be inhibited to allow conversion of CD4 + T cells into induced regulatory T cells. Thus, this study identifies a major role for CD8 + T cell–derived CD40 signals as a critical switch factor that both promotes optimal differentiation of cytokine-producing CD8 + effector T cell responses and inhibits the differentiation of Ag-specific Foxp3 + induced regulatory T cells in vivo.
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