Abstract
Programmed T cell differentiation is critically influenced by the complement of costimulatory and coinhibitory signals transmitted during initial antigen encounter. We previously showed that selective CD28 blockade with novel domain antibodies that leave CTLA-4-mediated coinhibitory signaling intact resulted in more profound attenuation of donor-reactive T cell responses and improved graft survival in a murine transplant model. Selective CD28 blockade was also associated with decreased ICOS expression on donor-reactive CD8+ T cell responses as compared to CTLA-4 Ig, but the functional importance of this reduced ICOS expression was not known. In this study, we created retrogenic donor-reactive CD8+ T cells that overexpress ICOS in order to determine whether reduced ICOS expression mechanistically underlies the increased efficacy of selective CD28 blockade in controlling graft-specific T cell responses as compared to conventional costimulation blockade with CTLA-4 Ig. Results indicated that the ability of selective CD28 blockade to blunt donor-reactive CD8+ T cell expansion following transplantation was independent of its ability to inhibit ICOS expression. Furthermore, we have previously published that 2B4 coinhibitory signals are functionally important for controlling graft-specific CD8+ T cell responses in mice treated with CD28 blockade. Here we used a co-adoptive transfer approach to determine that 2B4 coinhibitory signals on antigen-specific CD8+ T cells function in a cell-intrinsic manner to limit ICOS expression in the setting of selective CD28 blockade.
Highlights
Tcell activation is triggered following TCR recognition of cognate antigen/MHC complexes, but the ensuing programmed differentiation is profoundly modified by the complement of costimulatory and coinhibitory signals transmitted during initial antigen encounter [1, 2]
Treatment with CTLA-4 Ig resulted in decreased ICOS expression on antigen-specific cells in both the CD4+ and CD8+ T cell compartments, but animals treated with anti-CD28 dAb experienced an even more profound reduction in ICOS expression (Fig 1B)
In this study we addressed the role of modulation of the ICOS pathway following selective CD28 blockade
Summary
Tcell activation is triggered following TCR recognition of cognate antigen/MHC complexes, but the ensuing programmed differentiation is profoundly modified by the complement of costimulatory and coinhibitory signals transmitted during initial antigen encounter [1, 2]. It is increasingly recognized that the initial cosignals perceived during T cell activation result in transcription and translation of “secondary” inducible costimulatory or coinhibitory molecules, resulting in further fine-tuning of the response. CD28 Blockade Is Independent of ICOS Signaling PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0130490 June 22, 2015
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