[HTML][HTML] Tentative T cells: memory cells are quick to respond, but slow to divide

JK Whitmire, B Eam, JL Whitton - PLoS pathogens, 2008 - journals.plos.org
JK Whitmire, B Eam, JL Whitton
PLoS pathogens, 2008journals.plos.org
T cell memory is a cornerstone of protective immunity, and is the key element in successful
vaccination. Upon encountering the relevant pathogen, memory T cells are thought to initiate
cell division much more rapidly than their naïve counterparts, and this is thought to confer a
significant biological advantage upon an immune host. Here, we use traceable TCR-
transgenic T cells to evaluate this proposed characteristic in CD4+ and CD8+ memory T
cells. We find that, even in the presence of abundant antigen that was sufficient to induce in …
T cell memory is a cornerstone of protective immunity, and is the key element in successful vaccination. Upon encountering the relevant pathogen, memory T cells are thought to initiate cell division much more rapidly than their naïve counterparts, and this is thought to confer a significant biological advantage upon an immune host. Here, we use traceable TCR-transgenic T cells to evaluate this proposed characteristic in CD4+ and CD8+ memory T cells. We find that, even in the presence of abundant antigen that was sufficient to induce in vivo IFNγ production by memory T cells, both memory and naïve T cells show an extended, and indistinguishable, delay in the onset of proliferation. Although memory cells can detect, and respond to, virus infection within a few hours, their proliferation did not begin until ∼3 days after infection, and occurred simultaneously in all anatomical compartments. Thereafter, cell division was extraordinarily rapid for both naïve and memory cells, with the latter showing a somewhat accelerated accumulation. We propose that, by permitting memory T cells to rapidly exert their effector functions while delaying the onset of their proliferation, evolution has provided a safeguard that balances the risk of infection against the consequences of severe T cell–mediated immunopathology.
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