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Immuno-Apoptose, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 503, Center Européen de Recherche en Virologie et en Immunologie, Lyon, France
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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and contain prestored perforin. In contrast,
CD45RA-CCR7+ (central
memory T cells (TCM)) neither contain perforin nor secrete IFN-
but
express lymph node homing receptors and display memory cell
characteristics such as response to recall Ags or lower TCR-induced
activation threshold. In vitro, TCM differentiate into TEM following
anti-CD3+ anti-CD28 activation, suggesting
that these cells correspond to different steps in the differentiation
pathway from naive to terminally differentiated effector cells
(12). These two subsets of memory cells appear to have
complementary functions, TEM being capable of immediate effector
functions while TCM could sustain the response at later stages. Hence,
the generation and maintenance of both subsets could be essential for a
long-term protective memory response. However, it has recently been
shown that different viruses can lead to differential maturation or
maintenance of memory CD8 T cells, resulting in distinct representation
of these two subsets among virus-specific memory cells
(13). Understanding the conditions leading to the
generation and the maintenance of these two subsets is therefore a
question of particular interest, especially in vaccinology.
Lanzavecchia and Sallusto (14) proposed that because TCM
and TEM occupy different niches they may rely on different types of
survival signals for their persistence. This possibility is attractive
because it fits well with previous findings which showed that memory T
cells are heterogeneous in their maintenance requirements
(15, 16, 17).
In mice, identification of these subsets has been hampered by the lack
of a CCR7-specific Ab. We have previously shown that in primed
thymectomized (Tx) F5 TCR-transgenic mice two subsets of memory
phenotype CD8 memory cells coexist:
CD44intCD122- CD8 T
cells that are generated following peptide priming and
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
that are heterogeneous in terms of Ag specificity (8, 18).
In this study we show that these two subsets are similar to human TCM
and TEM subsets of memory CD8 T cells in terms of CCR7 expression and
response to macrophage-inflammatory protein (MIP)-3
. Hence,
we have taken advantage of this model to study the persistence of these
cells in vivo in the absence of cell transfer.
| Materials and Methods |
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C57BL/10 and F5 TCR-transgenic mice were gifts from D. Kioussis (London, U.K.) (19) and were bred in the animal facility of the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale. C57BL/6 mice were obtained from Iffa Credo (LArbresle, France). Thymectomies were performed on 5- to 6-wk-old mice, which were then allowed to recover for at least 4 wk before immunization. F5 mice were immunized i.p. once (once-primed) or twice within a 24-h interval (twice primed), with 50 nmol of the influenza virus nucleoprotein (NP)68 peptide: Ala-Ser-Asn-Glu-Asn-Met-Asp-Ala-Met NP366374 (Synt:em, Nimes, France) in saline. Primed mice were used starting 6 wk after peptide injection. Control F5 mice were not injected.
Purification of CD8 T cell subsets and in vitro proliferation assays
Culture medium is composed of DMEM (Life Technologies, Cergy
Pontoise, France) supplemented with 6% FCS, 50 µg/ml gentamicin, 2
mM L-glutamine (Life Technologies), 10 mM HEPES, and 50
µM
-ME (Sigma Chemicals, LIsle dAbeau, France). Lymph node or
splenic CD8 T cells from F5 mice were purified by magnetic beads using
a negative selection strategy. Briefly, a pool of lymph node and spleen
cells was applied to Ficoll-Hypaque (Lympholyte-M; Cedarlane
Laboratories, Hornby, Ontario, Canada) gradient centrifugation followed
by an incubation for 30 min at 4°C with a mixture of culture
supernatants containing the following rat mAbs anti-CD4 (GK1.5),
anti-GR-1 (RB6.8), anti-Mac-1 (M1/70.15), and
anti-I-Ab (M5/114.15.2). A total of 15 µg
of purified rat anti-mouse B220 (clone RA3-6B2; Cedarlane
Laboratories) were also added. Cells were then washed three times with
medium and incubated for 30 min at 4°C with goat anti-rat IgG (H and
L)-coupled magnetic beads (Polysciences, Eppelheim, Germany) at
a ratio of 20 beads per cell. Positive cells were removed by
application to a magnet. Cell population purified by this method
contained 9298% of CD8 T lymphocytes, as assessed by flow cytometric
analysis. For sorting, purified CD8 T cells were incubated for 30 min
with fluorochrome-coupled anti-CD8 (YTS169.4-PE; BD PharMingen, San
Diego, CA) and anti-CD44 (IM-781-FITC, made in our
laboratory) Abs. After two washes with medium, cells were sorted
into CD44low, CD44int, or
CD44high as previously described
(18).
For proliferation assays, 1 x 103 sorted F5 cells were activated in 96-well plates with various concentrations of NP68 peptide in the presence of 2 x 105 irradiated (3000 cGy) C57BL/10 spleen cells and 5% of a supernatant containing IL-2. On day 4, cells were pulsed overnight with 0.5 µCi [3H]thymidine/well (2 Ci/mmol; Amersham, Pharmacia Biotech Europe, Saclay, France) and harvested 16 h later.
Induction of cytokine synthesis for intracellular staining assays
For all intracellular cytokine detection assays, staining was preceded by a 5-h in vitro stimulation. Briefly, freshly isolated or cultured F5 splenocytes were applied to Ficoll-Hypaque gradient centrifugation. Cells were then washed twice with medium and stimulated at a concentration of 1 x 107/ml in the presence of 0.67 µl/ml Golgi-stop (BD PharMingen) with 10 nM peptide or with anti-CD3 Abs coated to microtiter plates in the presence of 2 µg/ml anti-CD28 (37.51) Abs. Ab coating was performed for 2 h at 37°C with 100 µl PBS per well containing 10 µg/ml anti-CD3 (2C11).
Fluorescence staining and flow cytometry analysis
A total of 106 spleen cells resuspended in
PBS containing 1% FCS and 0.09% NaN3 were
incubated with Ab at 4°C for 45 min. Cells were then washed twice
with PBS/FCS/NaN3 before incubation in the
presence of second-layer reagents (avidin-PE or avidin-tricolor; Caltag
Laboratories, South San Francisco, CA) for 30 min at 4°C. After two
more washes cells were analyzed on a FACScan or a FACSCalibur (BD
Biosciences, Mountain View, CA). The following Abs were used: 53-6.7-PE
or -Tricolor (anti-CD8) and H57-597-FITC (anti-TCR
), from
Caltag Laboratories; TM-
1 (anti-CD122), from BD PharMingen; and
IM7.8.1-FITC or -biotin (anti-CD44), prepared in house. Tetramers
were a kind gift of Dr. T. Schumacher (Amsterdam, The
Netherlands). Staining of spleen cells with tetramers was
performed as described for Abs.
Intracellular staining
After surface staining, cells were washed twice in
PBS/FCS/NaN3. For cytokine or Bcl-2 staining the
Cytofix/Cytoperm kit (BD PharMingen) was used according to the
manufacturers instructions. The following Abs were used: XMG1.2-FITC
(anti-IFN-
), PE-labeled Armenian hamster anti-Bcl-2, and
isotype control (all from BD PharMingen).
Staining for 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation was conducted as previously described with minor modifications (8). In brief, cells were stained for surface markers as above, resuspended in cold 0.15 M NaCl solution, and fixed by injection in cold ethanol to a final concentration of 70%. After a 30-min incubation on ice, cells were washed once with PBS and resuspended in PBS, 0.001% Tween 20, and 1% paraformaldehyde. After a 1-h incubation at room temperature, cells were washed with 0.15 M NaCl, and the DNA was partially digested with DNase I (Appligene, Illkirch, France) in 25 mM CaCl2, 5 mM MgCl2, and 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4). Cells were then washed with 0.15 M NaCl before adding the anti-BrdU Ab (B44-FITC; BD Biosciences). After overnight incubation, cells were washed with PBS before flow cytometry analysis.
Chemotaxis assays
Naive and primed lymphocytes (2.5 x
106 each) were mixed and placed in the upper
chamber of a 5-µm pore polycarbonate Transwell culture insert
(Costar, Cambridge, MA). Naive or primed cells were labeled with CFSE
as previously described (20). Different concentrations of
recombinant mouse MIP-3
from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN) were
added in the lower chamber. The chemotaxis medium consisted of RPMI
1640/10% FCS. After a 90-min migration, cell numbers were evaluated
using a set length of acquisition time on the FACScan. A standard curve
was drawn using serial dilutions of the starting cell suspension. The
percentage of CD8 subsets in the transmigrated cells and the starting
population were determined by staining and were used to calculate the
number of cells belonging to each subset. These were then used to
calculate the migration index that corresponds to the number of
transmigrating cells of a given subset divided by the number of cells
of that subset in the starting cell suspension multiplied by 100.
Multiprobe RNase protection assays
Cells were applied to Ficoll-Hypaque gradient centrifugation or FACS-sorted, and total cellular RNA was isolated by the RNA Now method according to the manufacturers instructions (Biogentex, Seabrook, TX). Cytokine or apoptosis regulator mRNA levels were measured by RNase protection assays using the Riboquant kit (BD PharMingen) following the instructions of the supplier. In brief, 13 µg RNA were hybridized overnight to the 32P-labeled RNA probe, which had been previously synthesized from the supplied template (mapo-2 or a custom probe from BD PharMingen). Single-stranded RNA and free probe were digested by RNase A and T1. Subsequently, protected RNA was phenolized, precipitated, and analyzed on a 6% denaturing polyacrylamide gel. The quantity of protected RNAs was determined using a PhosphorImager and ImageQuant software (both from Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). The length of their respective fragments was used to identify the transcripts.
| Results |
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In F5 mice, in the absence of NP68 immunization most peripheral
CD8 T cells have the
CD44lowCD122- naive
phenotype. i.p. injection of NP68 peptide in F5 mice leads to the
generation of a memory
CD44intLy6C+CD122-
CD8 T cell population that is hyperreactive to antigenic challenge in
vitro and has an increased capacity to produce IFN-
(Fig. 1
D and Refs. 8, 18 and 21). These functional characteristics are
two features of memory CD8 T cells.
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staining that all
CD44high CD8 T cells express a lower level of TCR
than CD44low or CD44int CD8
T cells and that they are V
11 positive, indicating that they express
the transgenic TCR
chain (Ref. 18 and data not
shown).
Altogether, these results suggest that the majority of these cells in
naive and once-primed mice express an endogenously rearranged TCR
chain and a new antigenic specificity. This is in agreement with our
observation that although these cells cycle in vivo they do not
proliferate detectably in response to NP68 peptide challenge in vitro
(18). However, although heterogeneous in terms of
antigenic specificity, CD44high CD8 T cells
behave like memory cells and not like anergic cells, as they are able
to produce IFN-
following a 5-h stimulation with anti-CD3 and
anti-CD28 Abs (Fig. 1
D).
Results in Fig. 1
, B and D, indicated that
priming F5 mice with a single injection of peptide does not lead to a
detectable increase in the percentage of
CD44highCD122+tetramerlow
cells, suggesting that NP68-specific memory cells with that phenotype
are not generated in these priming conditions. However, we have
recently observed that following sustained priming (i.e., two
injections of NP68 peptide within a 24-h interval: twice-primed) a
significant number of
CD44highCD122+tetramerlow
CD8 T cells are generated (Fig. 1
, B and C).
CD44highCD122+tetramerlow
memory cells generated in twice-primed mice are responsive to peptide
stimulation as they produce IFN-
following a 5-h stimulation with
the NP68 peptide (Fig. 1
C).
These results indicate that in primed F5 mice at least two subsets of memory phenotype CD8 T cells coexist: CD44intCD122- CD8 cells, which are generated only following NP68 peptide priming; and CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells, which are heterogeneous in terms of antigenic specificity but can contain a fraction of NP68-specific memory cells.
CCR7 expression by CD8 T cell subsets
In humans two subsets of CD8 memory cells that differ by their
expression of the chemokine receptor CCR7 have been described
(12). To assess the expression of CCR7 by the different
subsets of F5 CD8 T cells we have measured the expression of CCR7 mRNA
by RNase protection assay. Results presented in Fig. 2
A show that F5
CD44int NP68 peptide-specific memory CD8 T cells
generated in once-primed mice (or twice-primed mice; data not shown)
express high levels of CCR7 mRNA similar to naive F5
CD44low CD8 T cells while F5
CD44high memory phenotype CD8 T cells express a
low level of CCR7 mRNA. To test whether the difference in CCR7
expression at the mRNA level leads to decreased receptor levels at the
cell surface, and because we had no access to a mouse CCR7-specific Ab,
we have measured the chemotactic response of CD8 cell subsets to the
CCR7 ligand MIP-3
. Results in Fig. 2
B show that
CD44int CD8 cells show the same level of response
to MIP3
as do CD44low CD8 cells. In contrast,
CD44high CD8 cells show a significantly weaker
response to this chemokine, confirming a decrease in CCR7 expression at
the cell surface. This is further strengthened by the observation that
memory phenotype
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
are preferentially found in spleen or peripheral blood and are excluded
from the lymph nodes as compared with
CD44intCD122- CD8 memory
cells (Fig. 2
C). The differential expression of CCR7 mRNA by
these cells suggest that they could be the mouse counterpart of the TEM
and TCM subsets of memory phenotype CD8 T cells described in
humans.
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Memory phenotype CD8 subsets maintain functional memory characteristics but have a distinct persistence in vivo
We have taken advantage of the coexistence of these two subsets of
memory phenotype CD8 T cells in primed F5 mice to compare their
relative persistence in vivo without cell transfer and in the absence
of thymic output. This was done by measuring their number over time in
primed Tx animals. The persistence of
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
in naive Tx mice was also analyzed. Results presented in Fig. 3
, A and B, show
that the number and the percentage of CD8 T cells in the spleen
decrease over time starting 4 mo after thymectomy and that the kinetics
are similar in naive and NP68 primed mice. This reduction was due to a
steady decline in the percentage of CD44low cells
in naive mice or CD44int cells in primed mice
(Fig. 3
B). These data indicate that
CD44int memory cells and
CD44low naive CD8 cells have similar life spans
in F5 Tx mice. In contrast, the percentage of
CD44high CD8 T cells strongly increased in both
naive and primed Tx F5 mice. Using twice-primed F5 mice we have also
studied the persistence of the small subset of NP68-specific
CD44highCD122+ CD8 memory T
cells that is generated following sustained priming. We first verified
that sustained priming does not modify the persistence of the two
subsets of memory CD8 T cells, namely the
CD44intCD122- subset and
the CD44highCD122+ subset
(Fig. 3
C). Because the same profile of persistence as the
one observed in once-primed mice was found for both subsets, we next
studied the behavior of
CD44highCD122+
NP68-specific CD8 T cells by measuring the percentage of
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
producing IFN-
following a 5-h NP68 stimulation. Results in Fig. 3
C show that the persistence profile of these NP68-specific
cells is similar to the one observed when the whole
CD44highCD122+ CD8 subset
is monitored. These results suggest that the increased persistence of
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
is independent of their antigenic specificity. Hence in the next
experiments we have studied the
CD44highCD122+ CD8 subset
as a whole.
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secretion capacities
215 mo after priming (Fig. 4
-secreting capacity in response to NP68 peptide
stimulation (Fig. 3
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CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cell maintenance correlates with higher expression levels of Bcl-x, A1, and Bcl-2, and with increased resistance to apoptosis
The in vivo persistence of
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
could also result from improved survival potential compared with the
other subsets of CD8 T cells. To evaluate the survival potential of the
different F5 CD8 subsets we have first measured their expression of
different antiapoptotic genes belonging to the Bcl-2 family. These
genes code for proteins that increase cell resistance to a large panel
of apoptotic pathways. CD8 T cells were purified respectively from
2-mo-old naive non-Tx mice (>95% of CD44low
cells), 3-mo-old primed Tx mice (at least 80% of
CD44int cells), and 15- to 20-mo-old Tx mice
(90% of CD44high cells). Alternatively,
CD44low, CD44int, and
CD44high CD8 T cells were sorted by flow
cytometry from bulk CD8 populations isolated from naive or immunized
age-matched F5 Tx mice. Total RNA was extracted and the level of bcl-2
family members was measured by RNase protection assay. Results
presented in Fig. 5
, A and
B, show that Bcl-x and A1 (mouse homolog of human Bfl-1)
mRNA levels are higher in the
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
than in the other subsets. Although for some unknown reason the level
of all RNAs was decreased when the different subsets were sorted
(compare scale from upper and lower panels in
Fig. 5
B), the differential Bcl-x and A1 expression was
maintained. This indicates that the difference observed between the
subsets is not related to age, because in these experiments the CD8
subsets were obtained from age-matched mice. This differential
expression of Bcl-x and A1 was not restricted to F5 mice, as it was
also observed in CD8 T cell subsets sorted from C57BL/6 mice (data not
shown). The level of Bcl-2 mRNA measured by RNase protection was too
low to be accurately quantified. Therefore, the level of Bcl-2 was
measured at the protein level using flow cytometry. Results in Fig. 5
C show that the
CD44intCD122- and the
CD44lowCD122- CD8 T cells
both express the Bcl-2 protein. However, Bcl-2 levels were the highest
in CD44highCD122+ CD8 T
cells.
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| Discussion |
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following a short-term peptide stimulation. They express high levels of
mRNA coding for the CCR7 protein and show a MIP-3
responsiveness
that is similar to naive cells. The increased in vitro proliferation
and the expression of CCR7 by these cells could suggest that they are
the mouse counterpart of the human TCM subset. However, human CD8 TCM
do not produce IFN-
in response to PMA-ionomycin stimulation
(12). This could reflect a difference between
CCR7+ CD8 memory cells in humans and mice.
Alternatively, the magnitude of the IFN-
response could vary
according to the method used to activate the T cells. Indeed, in the F5
system stimulation of the CD44int subset with
anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 Abs leads to a lower levels of IFN-
staining by a reduced number of cells compared with NP68 peptide
stimulation (see Fig. 1
CD8 T cells in the second subset are
CD44highCD122+, the
majority of them express V
11 but do not bind the NP68 tetramer, and
they can be generated independently of NP68 peptide stimulation.
However, following sustained priming a subset of
tetramerlowCD44highCD122+
CD8 T cells can be generated. CD8 T cells belonging to the
CD44high subset express low levels of mRNA coding
for the CCR7 protein and show a decreased responsiveness to MIP-3
in
vitro. Moreover, in vivo, when compared with
CD44low naive or CD44int
memory CD8 T cells CD44high CD8 T cells are
preferentially distributed in spleen and peripheral blood. This fits
well with their decreased expression of CCR7, as this receptor plays an
essential role in the migration of immune cells into lymph nodes
(31, 32). CD44high CD8 T cells are
able to produce high levels of IFN-
following a brief stimulation
using a combination of anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 Abs. Similarly,
the
tetramerlowCD44highCD122+
CD8 T cells produce IFN-
in response to stimulation with NP68
peptide. The CD44highCD122+
phenotype of these cells and their functional characteristics are
classical hallmarks of memory CD8 T cells in mice. Based on the CCR7
expression and IFN-
response these CD44high
CD8 T cells are similar to the TEM described in humans. However, we
have been unable to assess the proliferation capacity of the
CD44high CD8 cells in vitro, as they do not
proliferate significantly in response to peptide stimulation
(18). This could reflect the low frequency of
tetramer-positive cells among the CD44high
subset. However, these cells also proliferate weakly in response to
anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 stimulation (data not shown). In this
respect they are similar to memory phenotype CD8 T cells, which are
generated following homeostatic proliferation in other TCR-transgenic
systems (6) and to thymus-independent T cells
(33). This last point highlights the fact that
CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells
in F5 but also in wild-type mice, where they are classically identified
as memory cells, could be heterogeneous not only in their antigenic
specificity but also in their generation requirements. Indeed, cells
with a similar phenotype are generated experimentally by homeostatic
pressure (22, 23, 24, 25, 26), naturally in elderly patients
(34, 35) but also after antigenic stimulation (6, 25, 36, 37). Therefore, this subset includes "true" Ag
experienced memory cells and T cells masquerading as memory cells. A
similar heterogeneity of the human
CD8+CCR7- population has
also been described (38, 39).
We took advantage of the in vivo coexistence of two types of memory
phenotype CD8 T cells in F5 mice to compare their persistence. In vivo
the size of the CD44high CD8 memory phenotype
subset was maintained for the entire life span of the animal. Moreover,
these cells preserved their increased responsiveness. Indeed, the small
percentage of CD44high F5
TCR+ cells producing IFN-
in response to NP68
peptide stimulation was maintained constant over time. This also
suggests that in Tx F5 mice the repertoire of the
CD44highCD122+ cells is
relatively stable and that CD44 phenotype conversion of
CD44low/int tetramer-positive does not contribute
to the CD44high subset increase. In contrast, the
size of the CD44int CD8 memory subset showed a
slow but steady decrease over time that was similar to the one observed
for naive cells. Nevertheless,
CD44intCD122- memory CD8 T
cells maintained their improved function in terms of IFN-
production
and in vitro proliferation in response to peptide stimulation.
Moreover, although sustained priming does leads to a further increase
in the proliferation and IFN-
secretion capacity of the
CD44int CD8 subset, it does not modify their
persistence profile. These data also highlight that memory cell
characteristics such as long-term persistence and increased
responsiveness can be acquired independently. A consequence of this
property is that the memory CD8 pool could be even more heterogeneous
as a result of differential acquisition of functional or survival
properties. Indeed, expression of NK cell inhibitory receptor can drive
the preferential accumulation of TM1 cells, a subset of
CD44highCD122+ CD8 memory T
cells (27). Moreover, different pathogens could drive the
differentiation of naive cells in different subsets of memory cells
with different functional properties or survival requirements. In fact,
this has recently been found for different viruses or Ags (13, 27).
One important issue is to determine the parameters involved in the preferential persistence of the CD44highCD122+ CD8 memory subset. The expression of CD122 by CD44high CD8 T cells could be involved in the preferential survival of CD8 T cells from that subset. Indeed, a recent report where CD122 expression by memory CD8 T cells was induced by addition of cytokines during the priming phase does support this hypothesis (40). Alternatively, environmental Ags that would cross-react with the TCR could drive the persistence of CD44highCD122+ F5 CD8 T cells. This does not fit with results obtained by others, showing that memory CD44highCD122+ CD8 T cells persist when transferred in MHC class I knockout mice (41). Moreover, if an endogenous Ag cross-reacting with the F5 TCR did exist, it should react with and drive the persistence of both CD44int and CD44high NP68-specific CD8 T cells. However, this is not what we observe.
We found that in Tx mice, but not euthymic mice, the size of that subset increases with time. Although CD44high CD8 T cells contained a high proportion of dividing cell in both types of mice, the size increase observed in Tx mice correlated with a higher percentage of dividing cells in the CD44high subset. The augmented proliferation could result from the partial lymphopenia caused by the thymectomy and could be driven by the same mechanisms that drive the homeostatic proliferation that occurs when T cells are transferred in lymphopenic hosts (22, 23, 24, 25, 26). Alternatively, the thymus, in addition to its role in the production of mature T cells, could be involved in the homeostatic control of that subset. The persistence of the CD44high CD8 T cells is also associated with increased expression of three antiapoptotic bcl-2 family members: bcl-x, A1, and bcl-2. The elevated expression of these genes is correlated with a higher in vivo resistance to irradiation-induced cell death. Hence we show that the persistence of the CD44high CD8 T cells could result from increased proliferation and survival capacity of these cells.
In the F5 system the long-term persistence of the
CD44high CD8 memory phenotype cells is associated
with the expression of the IL-2R
chain (CD122), which is also part
of the IL-15R. This fits well with a number of data showing that IL-15
drives the proliferation of CD44high CD8 T cells
and is essential for their maintenance in vivo (for a review see Refs.
42 and 43). Although we do not know if the
IL-15R expression is sufficient for the long-term persistence of memory
CD8 T cell it would be important to identify the factors driving its
expression. Indeed, long-term CD8 immunity may rely on the acquisition
of this receptor by memory cells. Results presented in this paper
indicate that for a given Ag, immunization conditions can indeed
modulate the type of memory cells that are generated. Defining
immunization conditions or adjuvants that would lead to the acquisition
of this receptor by CD8 memory cells would be essential in clinical
situations such as tumor immunotherapy where peptide immunization
against tumor Ag is currently used to induce effector T cells.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Jacqueline Marvel, Equipe Immuno-Apoptose, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 503, Center Européen de Recherche en Virologie et en Immunologie, 21 Avenue Tony Garnier, 69365 Lyon cedex 07, France. E-mail address: marvel{at}cervi-lyon.inserm.fr ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: TEM, effector memory T cell; BrdU, 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine; NP, nucleoprotein; MIP, macrophage-inflammatory protein; Tx, thymectomized; TCM, central memory T cell. ![]()
Received for publication November 13, 2001. Accepted for publication January 10, 2002.
| References |
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production following antigenic challenge in vitro. Int. Immunol. 11:699.
TCR+ T cells. Nat. Immunol. 1:107.[Medline]
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T. Walzer, A. Marcais, F. Saltel, C. Bella, P. Jurdic, and J. Marvel Cutting Edge: Immediate RANTES Secretion by Resting Memory CD8 T Cells Following Antigenic Stimulation J. Immunol., February 15, 2003; 170(4): 1615 - 1619. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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