Thymus-Derived CD4+CD8+ Cells Reside in Mediastinal Adipose Tissue and the Aortic Arch.
Holger WinkelsYanal GhoshehKouji KobiyamaWilliam B KiossesMarco OrecchioniErik EhingerVasantika SuryawanshiSara Herrera-De la MataPaola MarchovecchioThomas RiffelmacherNicolas ThiaultMitchell KronenbergDennis WolfGrégory SeumoisPandurangan VijayanandKlaus LeyPublished in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2021)
Double-positive CD4+CD8αβ+ (DP) cells are thought to reside as T cell progenitors exclusively within the thymus. We recently discovered an unexpected CD4+ and CD8αβ+ immune cell population in healthy and atherosclerotic mice by single-cell RNA sequencing. Transcriptomically, these cells resembled thymic DPs. Flow cytometry and three-dimensional whole-mount imaging confirmed DPs in thymus, mediastinal adipose tissue, and aortic adventitia, but nowhere else. Deep transcriptional profiling revealed differences between DP cells isolated from the three locations. All DPs were dependent on RAG2 expression and the presence of the thymus. Mediastinal adipose tissue DPs resided in close vicinity to invariant NKT cells, which they could activate in vitro. Thymus transplantation failed to reconstitute extrathymic DPs, and frequencies of extrathymic DPs were unaltered by pharmacologic inhibition of S1P1, suggesting that their migration may be locally confined. Our results define two new, transcriptionally distinct subsets of extrathymic DPs that may play a role in aortic vascular homeostasis.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- adipose tissue
- single cell
- cell cycle arrest
- lymph node
- insulin resistance
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- heart failure
- flow cytometry
- type diabetes
- high resolution
- left ventricular
- metabolic syndrome
- high fat diet
- aortic valve
- rna seq
- cell death
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high throughput
- coronary artery
- cell therapy
- pulmonary artery
- heat shock protein
- long non coding rna
- peripheral blood
- photodynamic therapy
- atrial fibrillation
- nk cells
- pulmonary hypertension