A CD103+ Conventional Dendritic Cell Surveillance System Prevents Development of Overt Heart Failure during Subclinical Viral Myocarditis

Xavier, Clemente-Casares, Siyavash, Hosseinzadeh, Iulia, Barbu, Sarah A, Dick, Jillian A, Macklin, Yiming, Wang, Abdul, Momen, Crystal, Kantores, Laura, Aronoff, Maylis, Farno, Tiffany M., Lucas, Joan, Avery, Dorrin, Zarrin-Khat, Heidi J, Elsaesser, Babak, Razani, Kory J, Lavine, Mansoor, Husain, David G, Brooks, Clinton S, Robbins, Myron, Cybulsky, Slava, Epelman

Immunity |

Innate and adaptive immune cells modulate heart failure pathogenesis during viral myocarditis, yet their identities and functions remain poorly defined. We utilized a combination of genetic fate mapping, parabiotic, transcriptional, and functional analyses and demonstrated that the heart contained two major conventional dendritic cell (cDC) subsets, CD103+ and CD11b+, which differentially relied on local proliferation and precursor recruitment to main- tain their tissue residency. Following viral infection of the myocardium, cDCs accumulated in the heart coincident with monocyte infiltration and loss of resi- dent reparative embryonic-derived cardiac macro- phages. cDC depletion abrogated antigen-specific CD8+ T cell proliferative expansion, transforming subclinical cardiac injury to overt heart failure. These effects were mediated by CD103+ cDCs, which are dependent on the transcription factor BATF3 for their development. Collectively, our findings identified resident cardiac cDC subsets, defined their origins, and revealed an essential role for CD103+ cDCs in antigen-specific T cell responses during subclinical viral myocarditis.