Pregnancy promotes tolerance to future offspring by programming selective dysfunction in long-lived maternal T cells

BM Barton, R Xu, EJ Wherry… - Journal of Leucocyte …, 2017 - academic.oup.com
BM Barton, R Xu, EJ Wherry, PM Porrett
Journal of Leucocyte Biology, 2017academic.oup.com
Fetal antigen available during pregnancy induces the proliferation of maternal T cells. It is
unknown, however, whether these antigen-activated T cells differentiate into long-lived
memory T cells that are capable of mediating rapid-recall responses to tissue antigens. To
test the hypothesis that pregnancy induces an alternative fate in fetal-specific maternal T
cells, we used a murine model to track longitudinally fetal-specific T cells in pregnant and
postpartum animals and test the response of these cells when challenged with the same …
Abstract
Fetal antigen available during pregnancy induces the proliferation of maternal T cells. It is unknown, however, whether these antigen-activated T cells differentiate into long-lived memory T cells that are capable of mediating rapid-recall responses to tissue antigens. To test the hypothesis that pregnancy induces an alternative fate in fetal-specific maternal T cells, we used a murine model to track longitudinally fetal-specific T cells in pregnant and postpartum animals and test the response of these cells when challenged with the same antigen during sequential pregnancy or skin transplantation. Fetal-specific CD8+ T cells were robustly primed during pregnancy but failed to acquire robust effector functions. These primed cells persisted long term in postpartum animals, frequently maintained a programmed death 1 (PD-1)+ phenotype, and failed to expand or produce cytokines robustly in response to second pregnancy or skin transplantation. However, whereas there was no impact on second pregnancy as a result of the persistence of fetal-primed memory CD8+ T cells in the mother, skin grafts bearing the same antigen were rejected more rapidly. Altogether, our data suggest that fetal antigen exposure during pregnancy induces the differentiation of long-lived maternal CD8+ T cells with context-dependent, selective effector dysfunction. This programmed effector dysfunction provides temporal and systemic restraint of maternal anti-fetal alloreactivity to promote reproductive fitness efficiently, while preserving potentially protective effector T cell responses.
Oxford University Press