Abstract
Abstract Understanding mechanisms of immune regulation is key to developing effective immunotherapies for autoimmunity and cancer. We examined the role of mononuclear phagocytes (MNPs) in regulating effector T cells in type 1 diabetes and melanoma. MNPs in the islets impaired T cell responsiveness to antigen by preventing T cell arrest. MNPs in the autoimmune lesion express the TAM family receptor tyrosine kinase Mertk which functions in efferocytosis. Inhibition or deficiency of Mertk led to a release from T cell regulation characterized by enhanced T cell arrest in pre-diabetic islets and at the tumor site. T cell arrest was accompanied by increased T cell-antigen presenting cell interactions in the islets. Antigen experience and effector function by T cells was increased with Mertk inhibition in the islets, but not in lymph nodes. Single cell RNA-seq analysis of islet MNPs identified multiple myeloid subsets. Inhibition of Mertk induced the most significant changes in gene expression among the islet resident macrophages including upregulation of inflammatory cytokine and adhesion genes. In the NOD mouse model, inhibition of Mertk-dependent T cell regulation culminated in the rapid acceleration of autoimmune pathology and disease. In human islets, the number of Mertk-expressing cells were increased in remaining insulin-containing islets from type 1 diabetic patients, suggesting that they might have a protective role in human disease. These data indicate that Mertk signaling in MNPs drives T cell regulation that functions specifically at the disease site in peripheral tissues through a mechanism that prevents T cell arrest and hinders response to antigen.
Submitted Version
Published Version
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