Human MAIT cells are xenobiotic-resistant, tissue-targeted, CD161hi IL-17–secreting T cells

Author:

Dusseaux Mathilde12,Martin Emmanuel12,Serriari Nacer3,Péguillet Isabelle14,Premel Virginie12,Louis Delphine14,Milder Maud14,Le Bourhis Lionel12,Soudais Claire12,Treiner Emmanuel3,Lantz Olivier124

Affiliation:

1. Institut Curie, Département de Biologie des Tumeurs, Paris, France;

2. Inserm U932, Paris, France;

3. Avenir Inserm U925, Faculté de Médecine, Amiens, France; and

4. Center of Clinical Investigations CICBT507 IGR/Curie, Paris, France

Abstract

Abstract Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are very abundant in humans and have antimicrobial specificity, but their functions remain unclear. MAIT cells are CD161hiIL-18Rα+ and either CD4−CD8− (DN) or CD8αβint T cells. We now show that they display an effector-memory phenotype (CD45RA−CD45RO+CD95hiCD62Llo), and their chemokine receptor expression pattern (CCR9intCCR7−CCR5hiCXCR6hiCCR6hi) indicates preferential homing to tissues and particularly the intestine and the liver. MAIT cells can represent up to 45% of the liver lymphocytes. They produce interferon-γ and Granzyme-B as well as high levels of interleukin-17 after phorbol myristate acetate + ionomycin stimulation. Most MAIT cells are noncycling cells (< 1% are Ki-67+) and express the multidrug resistance transporter (ABCB1). As expected from this phenotype, MAIT cells are more resistant to chemotherapy than other T-cell populations. These features might also allow MAIT cells to resist the xenobiotics potentially secreted by the gut bacteria. We also show that this population does not appear to have antiviral specificity and that CD8 MAIT cells include almost all the ABCB1+CD161hi CD8 T cells. Together with their already known abundance and antimicrobial specificity, the gut-liver homing characteristics, high expression of ABCB1, and ability to secrete interleukin-17 probably participate in the antibacterial properties of MAIT cells.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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