Litcius/Paper detail

Why do intestinal epithelial cells express MHC class II?

Cornelia Heuberger, Johanna Pott, Kevin J. Maloy

2020Immunology78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) constitute the border between the vast antigen load present in the intestinal lumen and the mucosal immune compartment. Their ability to express antigen processing and presentation machinery evokes the question whether IECs function as non-conventional antigen-presenting cells. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II expression by non-haematopoietic cells, such as IECs, is tightly regulated by the class II transactivator (CIITA) and is classically induced by IFN-γ. As MHC class II expression by IECs is upregulated under inflammatory conditions, it has been proposed to activate effector CD4+ T (Teff) cells. However, other studies have reported contradictory results and instead suggested a suppressive role of antigen presentation by IECs, through regulatory T (Treg)-cell activation. Recent studies investigating the role of MHC class II + exosomes released by IECs also reported conflicting findings of either immune enhancing or immunosuppressive activities. Moreover, in addition to modulating inflammatory responses, recent findings suggest that MHC class II expression by intestinal stem cells may elicit crosstalk that promotes epithelial renewal. A more complete understanding of the different consequences of IEC MHC class II antigen presentation will guide future efforts to modulate this pathway to selectively invoke protective immunity while maintaining tolerance to beneficial antigens.

Topics & Concepts

Antigen processingMHC class IIAntigen presentationCIITABiologyImmunologyMHC class IMajor histocompatibility complexAntigenImmune systemAntigen-presenting cellCell biologyCD8Cytotoxic T cellCross-presentationT cellIn vitroGeneticsImmune Cell Function and InteractionExtracellular vesicles in diseaseImmunotherapy and Immune Responses