AUTHOR=van der List Amy C. J. , Litjens Nicolle H. R. , Klepper Mariska , Betjes Michiel G. H. TITLE=Expression of Senescence Marker TIGIT Identifies Polyfunctional Donor-Reactive CD4+ T Cells Preferentially Lost After Kidney Transplantation JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=12 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.656846 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2021.656846 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=

Development of T-cell hyporesponsiveness to donor antigen may explain the substantial decreased risk for acute rejection in the years following kidney transplantation. The underlying mechanisms of donor-specific hyporesponsiveness (DSH) are largely unknown but may allow for lowering of immunosuppressive medication. Due to the onset of DSH being more rapid and pronounced in older recipients (+55 years), we hypothesized that immunosenescence/exhaustion of T lymphocytes would be a contributing factor. This study tested whether donor-reactive recipient T cells become hyporesponsive due to exhaustion from continuous stimulation by donor antigen. Circulating donor-reactive T cells of both young and elderly stable kidney transplant recipients (N=17) before and 3-5 years after transplantation were analyzed at the single cell level for expression of exhaustion markers by multi-parameter flow cytometry followed by unsupervised and unbiased clustering. Clusters containing cells of a particular expression profile with significant differential abundance after transplantation were identified and further analyzed. Unexpectedly, our results do not demonstrate an increase in exhausted donor antigen-reactive T cells post transplantation. Instead, we demonstrate a significant decrease in donor antigen-reactive CD4+ T cells expressing T cell immunoglobulin and ITIM domain (TIGIT) long after transplantation. Further analysis at earlier timepoints indicated that this decrease is already present at six months post transplantation. Characterization of these CD4+ T donor-reactive cells expressing TIGIT revealed them to have a predominantly central and effector memory T cell phenotype and a highly poly-functional cytokine expression profile. This study has therefore identified TIGIT as a marker for a previously undescribed polyfunctional donor-reactive CD4+ T cell population whose decline following kidney transplantation may explain development of DSH.