Abstract

The immune system in tolerance maintains cell diversity without responding to self-antigens. Foxp3-expressing CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) inhibit T-cell activation through various molecular mechanisms. However, several key questions are still not resolved, including how Tregs control the immune response on the basis of their self-skewed T-cell receptor repertoire and how Tregs avoid impeding relevant immunity against pathogens. Here, we show that Tregs promote the proliferation of conventional T cells in the presence of excessive co-stimulation when murine T cells are stimulated in vitro with allogeneic antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Antigen-specific Tregs increase the number of cells interacting with dendritic cells (DCs) by increasing the number of viable DCs and the expression of adhesion molecules on DCs. Theoretical simulations and mathematical models representing the dynamics of T-APC interaction and T-cell numbers in a lymph node indicate that Tregs reduce the dissociation probability of T cells from APCs and increase the new association. These functions contribute to tolerance by enhancing the interaction of low-affinity T cells with APCs. Supporting the theoretical analyses, we found that reducing the T-cell numbers in mice increases the ratio of specific T cells among CD4+ T cells after immunization and effectively induces autoimmune diabetes in non obese diabetes mice. Thus, as a critical function, antigen-specific Tregs stabilize the immune state, irrespective of it being tolerant or responsive, by augmenting T-APC interaction. We propose a novel regulation model in which stable tolerance with large heterogeneous populations proceeds to a specific immune response through a transient state with few populations.

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