Citation

van der Zwan A, Bi K, Norwitz ER, Crespo ÂC, Claas FHJ, Strominger JL, Tilburgs T. 2018. Mixed signature of activation and dysfunction allows human decidual CD8 T cells to provide both tolerance and immunity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 115(2):385-390. Pubmed: 29259116 DOI:10.1073/pnas.1713957115

Abstract

Understanding how decidual CD8 T cell (CD8 dT) cytotoxicity is regulated and how these cells integrate the competing needs for maternal-fetal tolerance and immunity to infection is an important research and clinical goal. Gene-expression analysis of effector-memory CD8 dT demonstrated a mixed transcriptional signature of T cell dysfunction, activation, and effector function. High protein expression of coinhibitory molecules PD1, CTLA4, and LAG3, accompanied by low expression of cytolytic molecules suggests that the decidual microenvironment reduces CD8 dT effector responses to maintain tolerance to fetal antigens. However, CD8 dT degranulated, proliferated, and produced IFN-γ, TNF-α, perforin, and granzymes upon in vitro stimulation, demonstrating that CD8 dT are not permanently suppressed and retain the capacity to respond to proinflammatory events, such as infections. The balance between transient dysfunction of CD8 dT that are permissive of placental and fetal development, and reversal of this dysfunctional state, is crucial in understanding the etiology of pregnancy complications and prevention of congenital infections.

Related Faculty

Photo of Tamara Tilburgs

Tamara Tilburgs investigates how maternal immune cells establish immunetolerance to foreign fetal and placental tissues while maintaining immunity to viral and bacterial infections. 

Search Menu