Manipulating the rate of memory CD8+ T cell generation after acute infection

VP Badovinac, JT Harty - The Journal of Immunology, 2007 - journals.aai.org
The Journal of Immunology, 2007journals.aai.org
Infection with Listeria monocytogenes elicits expansion in numbers of Ag-specific CD8+ T
cells, which then undergo programmed contraction. The remaining cells undergo further
phenotypic and functional changes with time, eventually attaining the qualities of memory
CD8+ T cells. In this study, we show that L. monocytogenes-specific CD8+ T cell populations
primed in antibiotic-pretreated mice undergo brief effector phase, but rapidly develop
phenotypic (CD127 high, CD43 low) and functional (granzyme B low, IL-2-producing) …
Abstract
Infection with Listeria monocytogenes elicits expansion in numbers of Ag-specific CD8+ T cells, which then undergo programmed contraction. The remaining cells undergo further phenotypic and functional changes with time, eventually attaining the qualities of memory CD8+ T cells. In this study, we show that L. monocytogenes-specific CD8+ T cell populations primed in antibiotic-pretreated mice undergo brief effector phase, but rapidly develop phenotypic (CD127 high, CD43 low) and functional (granzyme B low, IL-2-producing) characteristics of memory CD8+ T cells. These early memory CD8+ T cells were capable of substantial secondary expansion in response to booster challenge at day 7 postinfection, resulting in significantly elevated numbers of secondary effector and memory CD8+ T cells and enhanced protective immunity compared with control-infected mice. Although early expansion in numbers is similar after L. monocytogenes infection of antibiotic-pretreated and control mice, the absence of sustained proliferation coupled with decreased killer cell lectin-like receptor G-1 up-regulation on responding CD8+ T cells may explain the rapid effector to memory CD8+ T cell transition. In addition, antibiotic treatment 2 days post-L. monocytogenes challenge accelerated the generation of CD8+ T cells with memory phenotype and function, and this accelerated memory generation was reversed in the presence of CpG-induced inflammation. Together, these data show that the rate at which Ag-specific CD8+ T cell populations acquire memory characteristics after infection is not fixed, but rather can be manipulated by limiting inflammation that will in turn modulate the timing and extent to which CD8+ T cells proliferate and up-regulate killer cell lectin-like receptor G-1 expression.
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