Peripheral antigen display by lymph node stroma promotes T cell tolerance to intestinal self.

Lee, Je-Wook, Mathieu Epardaud, Jing Sun, Jessica E Becker, Alexander C Cheng, Ai-ris Yonekura, Joan K Heath, and Shannon J Turley. 2007. “Peripheral Antigen Display by Lymph Node Stroma Promotes T Cell Tolerance to Intestinal Self.”. Nature Immunology 8 (2): 181-90.

Abstract

The intestinal epithelium functions to absorb nutrients and to protect the organism against microbes. To prevent autoimmune attack on this vital tissue, T cell tolerance to intestinal self-antigens must be established. Central tolerance mechanisms involve medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs), which use endogenously expressed peripheral-tissue antigens (PTAs) to delete self-reactive thymocytes. The prevailing model for the induction of peripheral tolerance involves cross-presentation of tissue antigens by quiescent dendritic cells. Here we show that lymph node stromal cells present endogenously expressed PTAs to T cells. Moreover, antigen presentation by lymph node stroma is sufficient to induce primary activation and subsequent tolerance among CD8(+) T cells. Thus, lymph node stromal cells are functionally akin to mTECs and provide a direct strategy for purging the peripheral repertoire of self-reactive T cells.

Last updated on 12/16/2025
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