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[Preprint]. 2023 May 24:2023.05.23.541963. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.05.23.541963

Establishment of CD1b-restricted immunity to lipid antigens in the pulmonary response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection

Macallister C Harris, Hadley E Gary, Sarah K Cooper, David F Ackart, James E Dilisio, Randall J Basaraba, Tan-Yun Cheng, Ildiko van Rhijn, D Branch Moody, Brendan K Podell
PMCID: PMC10245897  PMID: 37292852

Abstract

CD1 is an antigen presenting glycoprotein homologous to MHC I; however, CD1 proteins present lipid rather than peptide antigen. CD1 proteins are well established to present lipid antigens of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) to T cells, but understanding the role of CD1-restricted immunity in vivo in response to Mtb infection has been limited by availability of animal models naturally expressing the CD1 proteins implicated in human response: CD1a, CD1b and CD1c. Guinea pigs, in contrast to other rodent models, express four CD1b orthologs, and here we utilize the guinea pig to establish the kinetics of gene and protein expression of CD1b orthologs, as well as the Mtb lipid-antigen and CD1b-restricted immune response at the tissue level over the course of Mtb infection. Our results indicate transient upregulation of CD1b expression during the effector phase of adaptive immunity that wanes with disease chronicity. Gene expression indicates that upregulation of CD1b is the result of transcriptional induction across all CD1b orthologs. We show high CD1b3 expression on B cells, and identify CD1b3 as the predominant CD1b ortholog in pulmonary granuloma lesions. We identify ex vivo cytotoxic activity directed against CD1b that closely paralleled the kinetic changes in CD1b expression in Mtb infected lung and spleen. This study confirms that CD1b expression is modulated by Mtb infection in lung and spleen, leading to pulmonary and extrapulmonary CD1b-restricted immunity as a component of the antigen-specific response to Mtb infection.

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