scholarly journals Requirement for T-bet in the aberrant differentiation of unhelped memory CD8+ T cells

2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (9) ◽  
pp. 2015-2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew M. Intlekofer ◽  
Naofumi Takemoto ◽  
Charlly Kao ◽  
Arnob Banerjee ◽  
Felix Schambach ◽  
...  

Immunity to intracellular pathogens requires dynamic balance between terminal differentiation of short-lived, cytotoxic effector CD8+ T cells and self-renewal of central–memory CD8+ T cells. We now show that T-bet represses transcription of IL-7Rα and drives differentiation of effector and effector–memory CD8+ T cells at the expense of central–memory cells. We also found T-bet to be overexpressed in CD8+ T cells that differentiated in the absence of CD4+ T cell help, a condition that is associated with defective central–memory formation. Finally, deletion of T-bet corrected the abnormal phenotypic and functional properties of “unhelped” memory CD8+ T cells. T-bet, thus, appears to function as a molecular switch between central– and effector–memory cell differentiation. Antagonism of T-bet may, therefore, represent a novel strategy to offset dysfunctional programming of memory CD8+ T cells.

2007 ◽  
Vol 75 (6) ◽  
pp. 2708-2716 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Jones-Carson ◽  
Bruce D. McCollister ◽  
Eric T. Clambey ◽  
Andrés Vázquez-Torres

ABSTRACT To better understand the evolution of a systemic memory response to a mucosal pathogen, we monitored antigen-specific OT1 CD8 T-cell responses to a fusion of the SspH2 protein and the peptide SIINFEKL stably expressed from the chromosome of Salmonella enterica and loaded into the class I pathway of antigen presentation of professional phagocytes through the Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 type III secretion system (TTSS). This strategy has revealed that effector memory CD8 T cells with low levels of CD62L expression (CD62Llow) are maintained in systemic sites months after vaccination in response to low-grade infections with Salmonella. However, the CD8 T-cell pool eventually declines. Low numbers of central memory cells surviving after prolonged resting from an antigen encounter can nevertheless reconstitute the systemic effector memory pool in a route-specific recall response to cognate antigens encountered in the gut. Accordingly, populations of CD62Lhigh interleukin-7 receptor-positive progenitor central memory cells grafted into naïve mice expand in response to orally administered Salmonella expressing the chromosomal translational fusion of sspH2 and the sequence encoding the SIINFEKL peptide but fail to proliferate following systemic stimulation. Moreover, populations of systemic memory CD8 T cells restricted to Salmonella in oral vaccines selectively expand in response to cognate antigens presented by cells isolated from mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN). Together, these findings have revealed the imprinting of systemic CD8 central memory T-cell recall responses against enteropathogens by MLN. MLN restriction represents a novel mechanism by which systemic CD8 T-cell immunity is confined to periods of high risk for extraintestinal dissemination.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (6) ◽  
pp. 1916-1923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nia Tatsis ◽  
Julie C. Fitzgerald ◽  
Arturo Reyes-Sandoval ◽  
Kimberly C. Harris-McCoy ◽  
Scott E. Hensley ◽  
...  

AbstractCD8+ T cell-numbers rapidly expand and then contract after exposure to their cognate antigen. Here we show that the sustained frequencies of transgene product-specific CD8+ T cells elicited by replication-defective adenovirus vectors are linked to persistence of low levels of transcriptionally active adenovirus vector genomes at the site of inoculation, in liver, and lymphatic tissues. Continuously produced small amounts of antigen maintain fully active effector CD8+ T cells, while also allowing for their differentiation into central memory cells. The long-term persistence of adenoviral vectors may be highly advantageous for their use as vaccines against pathogens for which T-cell–mediated protection requires both fully activated T cells for immediate control of virus-infected cells and central memory CD8+ T cells that, because of their higher proliferative capacity, may be suited best to eliminate cells infected by pathogens that escaped the initial wave of effector T cells.


2007 ◽  
Vol 180 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ni Wan ◽  
Hehua Dai ◽  
Tao Wang ◽  
Yolonda Moore ◽  
Xin Xiao Zheng ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3048-3048
Author(s):  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Gerard Joe ◽  
Elizabeth Hexner ◽  
Stephen G. Emerson

Abstract Memory CD8+ T cells are an important component of long-term immunity against infectious pathogens because of their higher frequency of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells as well as their ability to proliferate, produce inflammatory cytokines, and kill target cells more rapidly upon secondary antigen encounter than naïve CD8+ T cells. How the pool of memory CD8+ T cells is generated and maintained is key issue to understanding and perhaps manipulating long-term memory response, such as graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) where host antigens persist. Using a major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-identical but minor histocmpatibility (miHA)-mismatched mouse model of human allogeneic BM transplantation (allo-BMT), we recently identified alloreactive memory CD8+ T cells responsible for persistent GVHD. We found that donor CD44hiCD62Llo effector memory and CD44hiCD62Lhi central memory CD8+ T cells recovered 42 days after allo-BMT (d42-CD8+ T cells) from B6 mice receiving normal C3H.SW CD44loCD8+ T cells and T cell-depleted (T−BM) caused lethal GVHD in secondary B6 recipient mice. Interestingly, in addition to these classical memory phenotypes, a third population of donor CD44loCD62LhiCD8+ T cells, which accounted for 2% to 6% of whole d42-donor CD8+ T cells, was identified in the spleens and livers of these B6 recipients with ongoing GVHD. When cultured in the presence of B6 dendritic cells (DCs)+IL-2+IL-15, these d42-CD44loCD62LhiCD8+ T cells rapidly and vigorously proliferated as compared to d42-CD44hiCD62Llo and d42-CD44hiCD62LhiCD8+ T cells. By day 15 following this ex vivo culture, d42-CD44loCD62LhiCD8+ T cells expanded as many as 92.0-fold, whereas CD44hiCD62Llo effector/effector memory and CD44hiCD62Lhi central memory CD8+ T cells only expanded 2.1-fold and 11.0-fold, respectively. Furthermore, ex vivo stimulation of d42-CD44hiCD62LloCD8+ T cells with B6 DCs+IL-2+IL-15 only induced the generation of CD44hiCD62Llo effector/effector memory CD8+ T cells, whereas d42-CD44hiCD62hiCD8+ T cells generated both CD44hiCD62Llo and CD44hiCD62Lhi cells. In contrast, d42-CD44loCD62LhiCD8+ T cells generated all three T cells subsets, e.g., CD44hiCD62Llo, CD44hiCD62Lhi and CD44loCD62Lhi CD8+ T cells. These data suggest that d42-CD44loCD62Lhi CD8+ T cells have more potent ability than any other CD8+ T memory cell subsets to proliferate and differentiate into effector/memory T cells upon re-exposure to specific host miHAs as well as the ability to self-renew, resembling to the property of stem cells. Of note, these d42-CD44loCD62Lhi CD8+ T cells expressed much higher levels of CD122 and CD127 than donor naive CD44loCD8+ T cells. When cultured in the presence of B6 DCs+IL-2+IL-15 for 5 days, there were significantly more donor CD8+ T cells recovered from d42-CD4loCD62LhiCD8+ T cell cultures than that from truly naive CD44loCD8+ T cells(7.9-fold vs. 2.1 fold). Thus, d42-CD44loCD62LhiCD8+ T cells found in B6 mice with GVHD are distinguishable from truly naïve CD44loCD8+ T cells of normal C3H.SW mice and are responsible for sustaining the generation of both alloreactive effector memory and central memory CD8+ T cells. In summary, these data identify a heretofore unrecognized population of CD8+ T memory stem cells that may be key cellular targets for the prevention and treatment of persistent acute and chronic GVHD.


2004 ◽  
Vol 199 (7) ◽  
pp. 925-936 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra Wolint ◽  
Michael R. Betts ◽  
Richard A. Koup ◽  
Annette Oxenius

CD8+ T cells play a central role in the resolution and containment of viral infections. A key effector function of CD8+ T cells is their cytolytic activity toward infected cells. Here, we studied the regulation of cytolytic activity in naive, effector, and central versus effector memory CD8+ T cells specific for the same glycoprotein-derived epitope of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. Our results show that the kinetics of degranulation, assessed by a novel flow cytometric based assay, were identical in effector and both subsets of memory CD8+ T cells, but absent in naive CD8+ T cells. However, immediate cytolytic activity was most pronounced in effector T cells, low in effector memory T cells, and absent in central memory T cells, correlating with the respective levels of cytolytic effector molecules present in lytic granules. These results indicate that an inherent program of degranulation is a feature of antigen-experienced cells as opposed to naive CD8+ T cells and that the ability of CD8+ T cells to induce target cell apoptosis/death is dependent on granule protein content rather than on the act of degranulation itself. Furthermore, these results provide a potential mechanism by which central memory CD8+ T cell–mediated death of antigen-presenting cells within the lymph node is avoided.


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