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T cell receptor specificity drives accumulation of a reparative population of regulatory T cells within acutely injured skeletal muscle.

Citation
Cho, J., et al. “T Cell Receptor Specificity Drives Accumulation Of A Reparative Population Of Regulatory T Cells Within Acutely Injured Skeletal Muscle.”. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Jun Cho, Wilson Kuswanto, Christophe Benoist, Diane Mathis
Keywords T cell receptor, regulatory T cell, Skeletal muscle, tissue repair, transgenic mice
Abstract

Foxp3CD4 regulatory T cells (Tregs) play important roles in controlling both homeostatic processes and immune responses at the tissue and organismal levels. For example, Tregs promote muscle regeneration in acute or chronic injury models by direct effects on local muscle progenitor cells, as well as on infiltrating inflammatory cells. Muscle Tregs have a transcriptome, a T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, and effector capabilities distinct from those of classical, lymphoid-organ Tregs, but it has proven difficult to study the provenance and functions of these unique features due to the rarity of muscle Tregs and their fragility on isolation. Here, we attempted to sidestep these hindrances by generating, characterizing, and employing a line of mice carrying rearranged transgenes encoding the TCRα and TCRβ chains from a Treg clone rapidly and specifically expanded within acutely injured hindlimb muscle of young mice. Tregs displaying the transgene-encoded TCR preferentially accumulated in injured hindlimb muscle in a TCR-dependent manner both in the straight transgenic model and in adoptive-transfer systems; non-Treg CD4 T cells expressing the same TCR did not specifically localize in injured muscle. The definitive muscle-Treg transcriptome was not established until the transgenic Tregs inhabited muscle. When crossed onto the model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, the muscle-Treg TCR transgenes drove enhanced accumulation of Tregs in hindlimb muscles and improved muscle regeneration. These findings invoke the possibility of harnessing muscle Tregs or their TCRs for treatment of skeletal muscle pathologies.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1091-6490
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1914848116
Alternate Journal
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
PMID
31822623
PMCID
PMC6936428
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