Indeed, a partial rescue of Foxp3 expression occurred, especially at higher T/DC ratios (Fig. 2B) closer resembling the physiological ratio between T cells and DC in lymphoid organs. Therefore, DC are not only dispensable but actively inhibit Foxp3 induction in CD8+ T cells, in part by co-stimulation via CD80 and CD86. Since CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs in nonmanipulated Selleckchem Barasertib mice represent a polyclonal population
developing both intra- and extrathymically 18, we next studied CD8+Foxp3+ T cells in untreated WT mice by flow cytometry. After exclusion of aggregates, we found that CD8+Foxp3+ T cells only constitute 0.1–0.4% of the CD8+ T-cell compartment in spleen (Fig. 3A), peripheral and mesenteric lymph nodes (data not shown), representing about 2% of the total Foxp3+ population. Interestingly, Foxp3+ cells were SAHA HDAC cost also identified among CD8SP thymocytes, and CD8+Foxp3+ cells were absent from both thymus and periphery of Rag1−/−×OTI mice (Fig. 3A). CD4+GFP+ nonfunctional Tregs are selected in the absence of functional Foxp3 in depletion of regulatory T cells (DEREG)×scurfy (Sf) mice 3. To assess if the selection of CD8+Foxp3+ T cells requires Foxp3, we analyzed GFP and Foxp3 expression among CD8+
splenocytes and CD8+CD4− thymocytes from WT and DEREG×Sf mice. Here, a CD8+Foxp3−GFP+ population could be detected at frequencies similar to that of CD8+Foxp3+ T cells in WT mice (Fig. 3B), demonstrating that the expression of functional Foxp3 protein is not
essential for the generation of CD8+Foxp3+ T cells. Similarly, Foxp3-deficient DEREG×Rag1−/−×OTI×Sf CD8+ T cells up-regulated GFP upon culture with OVA257–264, IL-2, TGF-β and RA, although with slightly reduced efficiency compared with Foxp3-sufficient cells (Supporting Information Fig. 3A and B), similar to our previous findings with CD4+ T cells 3. Stable Foxp3 expression is epigenetically controlled by demethylation of the TSDR which is located within Carbachol the foxp3 gene locus 20. Natural CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs contain a fully demethylated TSDR and were stable during in vitro culture, whereas in vitro induced CD4+Foxp3+ Tregs display a heavily methylated TSDR and loose Foxp3 expression upon in vitro culture in the absence of TGF-β 23. To assess if similar mechanisms are operative in CD8+ T cells, we crossed Rag1−/−×OTI mice with bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-transgenic DEREG mice 6 allowing for selective isolation of induced Foxp3+ cells by eGFP reporter expression and assessed TSDR methylation within the foxp3 gene locus (including BAC-encoded copies). All CpG motifs were completely methylated in freshly isolated CD8+Foxp3− T cells (naïve) and no changes were observed upon T-cell activation (GFP−; Fig. 4A). Interestingly, induced CD8+Foxp3+ T cells maintained a fully methylated TSDR (GFP+; Fig. 4A), consistent with a rapid loss of Foxp3 expression upon in vitro stimulation in the absence of TGF-β (data not shown).