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Allograft rejection is restrained by short-lived TIM-3+PD-1+Foxp3+ Tregs
Shipra Gupta, Thomas B. Thornley, Wenda Gao, Rafael Larocca, Laurence A. Turka, Vijay K. Kuchroo, Terry B. Strom
Shipra Gupta, Thomas B. Thornley, Wenda Gao, Rafael Larocca, Laurence A. Turka, Vijay K. Kuchroo, Terry B. Strom
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Research Article Immunology

Allograft rejection is restrained by short-lived TIM-3+PD-1+Foxp3+ Tregs

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Abstract

Tregs play a pivotal role in inducing and maintaining donor-specific transplant tolerance. The T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain-3 protein (TIM-3) is expressed on many fully activated effector T cells. Along with program death 1 (PD-1), TIM-3 is used as a marker for exhausted effector T cells, and interaction with its ligand, galectin-9, leads to selective death of TIM-3+ cells. We report herein the presence of a galectin-9–sensitive CD4+FoxP3+TIM-3+ population of T cells, which arose from CD4+FoxP3+TIM-3– proliferating T cells in vitro and in vivo and were often PD-1+. These cells became very prominent among graft-infiltrating Tregs during allograft response. The frequency and number of TIM-3+ Tregs peaked at the time of graft rejection and declined thereafter. Moreover, these cells also arise in a tolerance-promoting donor-specific transfusion model, representing a pool of proliferating, donor-specific Tregs. Compared with TIM-3– Tregs, TIM-3+ Tregs, which are often PD-1+ as well, exhibited higher in vitro effector function and more robust expression of CD25, CD39, CD73, CTLA-4, IL-10, and TGF-β but not galectin-9. However, these TIM-3+ Tregs did not flourish when passively transferred to newly transplanted hosts. These data suggest that a heretofore unrecognized graft-infiltrating, short-lived subset of Tregs can restrain rejection.

Authors

Shipra Gupta, Thomas B. Thornley, Wenda Gao, Rafael Larocca, Laurence A. Turka, Vijay K. Kuchroo, Terry B. Strom

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Figure 3

TIM-3 expression is induced in Tregs in vitro and in vivo on activation.

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TIM-3 expression is induced in Tregs in vitro and in vivo on activation....
CD4+GFP+FoxP3+ cells (total Tregs) sorted from spleens of unmanipulated mice were cultured in vitro in the presence of anti-CD3 (plate coated) and soluble anti-CD28 with or without IL-2. (A) Cells were analyzed for TIM-3 expression by flow cytometry on day 4. (B) TIM-3 expression is not induced in TIM-3–GFP+FoxP3+ cells (TIM-3– Tregs) obtained from spleens of unmanipulated mice when cultured in vitro in the absence of anti-CD3, as indicated by flow cytometric analysis on day 4 (n = 3). Sorted GFP+(FoxP3+)TIM-3– cells (TIM-3– Tregs) from spleens of DBA/2 DST–infused BALB/c-KI mice were injected i.v. into (C) DBA/2 skin graft recipient BALB/c-Rag2–/– mice or (D) ungrafted BALB/c-Rag2–/– mice. Three weeks after transfer, CD4+GFP+(FoxP3+) spleen cells were analyzed for TIM-3 expression (n = 6). Numbers represent the percentage of CD4+GFP+FoxP3+ Tregs that are TIM-3+.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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