CD4 T Helper Cells Instruct Lymphopenia-Induced Memory-Like CD8 T Cells for Control of Acute LCMV Infection.
Journal:
Frontiers in immunology
Published Date:
Dec 21, 2016
Abstract
Lymphopenic conditions lead to expansion of memory-like T cells (T), which develop from naïve T cells by spontaneous proliferation. T cells are often increased in the elderly population, AIDS patients, and patients recovering from radio- or chemotherapy. At present, it is unclear whether T cells can efficiently respond to foreign antigen and participate in antiviral immunity. To address this question, we analyzed the immune response during acute low-dose infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-WE in T cell lymphopenic CD4Cre/R-diphtheria toxin alpha (DTA) mice in which most peripheral T cells show a T phenotype. On day 8 after infection, the total number of effector T cells and polyfunctional IFN-γ and TNF-α producing CD8 T cells were three- to fivefold reduced in CD4Cre/R-DTA mice as compared to controls. Viral clearance and the humoral immune response were severely impaired in CD4Cre/R-DTA mice although CTLs efficiently killed transferred target cells . Transfer of naïve CD4 T cells but not anti-PD-L1 blockade restored the expansion of antigen-specific polyfunctional CD8 T cells and resulted in lower viral titers. This finding indicates that under lymphopenic conditions endogenous CD4 T cell lack the capacity to promote expansion of CTLs. However, CD8 T cells retain sufficient functional plasticity to participate in antiviral immunity in the presence of appropriate help by fully functional CD4 T cells. This capacity might be exploited to develop treatments for improvement of CD8 T cell functions under various clinical settings of lymphopenia.
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