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Human MAIT cells exit peripheral tissues and recirculate via lymph in steady state conditions
Valentin Voillet, Marcus Buggert, Chloe K. Slichter, Julia D. Berkson, Florian Mair, Mary M. Addison, Yoav Dori, Gregory Nadolski, Maxim G. Itkin, Raphael Gottardo, Michael R. Betts, Martin Prlic
Valentin Voillet, Marcus Buggert, Chloe K. Slichter, Julia D. Berkson, Florian Mair, Mary M. Addison, Yoav Dori, Gregory Nadolski, Maxim G. Itkin, Raphael Gottardo, Michael R. Betts, Martin Prlic
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Research Article Immunology

Human MAIT cells exit peripheral tissues and recirculate via lymph in steady state conditions

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Abstract

Mucosal-associated invariant T cells (MAIT cells) recognize bacterial metabolites as antigen and are found in blood and tissues, where they are poised to contribute to barrier immunity. Recent data demonstrate that MAIT cells located in mucosal barrier tissues are functionally distinct from their blood counterparts, but the relationship and circulation of MAIT cells between blood and different tissue compartments remains poorly understood. Previous studies raised the possibility that MAIT cells do not leave tissue and may either be retained or undergo apoptosis. To directly address if human MAIT cells exit tissues, we collected human donor–matched thoracic duct lymph and blood and analyzed MAIT cell phenotype, transcriptome, and T cell receptor (TCR) diversity by flow cytometry and RNA sequencing. We found that MAIT cells were present in the lymph, despite being largely CCR7– in the blood, thus indicating that MAIT cells in the lymph migrated from tissues and were capable of exiting tissues to recirculate. Importantly, MAIT cells in the lymph and blood had highly overlapping clonotype usage but distinct transcriptome signatures, indicative of differential activation states.

Authors

Valentin Voillet, Marcus Buggert, Chloe K. Slichter, Julia D. Berkson, Florian Mair, Mary M. Addison, Yoav Dori, Gregory Nadolski, Maxim G. Itkin, Raphael Gottardo, Michael R. Betts, Martin Prlic

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Figure 1

Characterization of MAIT cells in human lymph compared with peripheral blood.

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Characterization of MAIT cells in human lymph compared with peripheral b...
(A) Gating strategy, frequencies and (B) representative flow plots and subsets of CD161hiVα7.2+ MAIT cells gated on live CD3+ cells from human lymph and matched peripheral blood (n = 12 donors). (C) Comparison of CCR7 expression between total CD3+ cells and MAIT cells. Surface expression of (D) CXCR3, (E) CCR6, and (F) CCR4 on MAIT cells in human lymph and peripheral blood. Each point corresponds to 1 patient, and lines connect matched samples. Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank tests were performed. *P ≤ 0.05 , ***P ≤ 0.001.

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