Adaptive Immune-like γ/δ T Lymphocytes Share Many Common Features with Their α/β T Cell Counterparts
Author(s) -
Amélie Lombès,
Aurélie Durand,
Céline Charvet,
Matthieu Rivière,
Nelly Bonilla,
Cédric Auffray,
Bruno Lucas,
Bruno Martin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1500375
Subject(s) - biology , cd44 , cytotoxic t cell , il 2 receptor , t cell , interleukin 21 , cd8 , natural killer t cell , microbiology and biotechnology , foxp3 , naive t cell , immune system , immunology , cell , in vitro , t cell receptor , genetics
To better apprehend γ/δ T cell biological functions in the periphery, it appears crucial to identify markers highlighting the existence of distinct phenotypic and functional γ/δ T cell subsets. Interestingly, the expression of CD44 and Ly-6C subdivides murine peripheral γ/δ T cells into several subsets, with Ly-6C(-) CD44(hi) γ/δ T cells corresponding to the IL-17-producing CD27(-) γ/δ T cell subset exhibiting innate-like features. By comparing the other subsets to naive and memory CD8(+) α/β T cells, in this study, we show that Ly-6C(- or +) CD44(lo) and Ly-6C(+)CD44(hi) γ/δ T cells greatly resemble, and behave like, their CD8(+) α/β T cell counterparts. First, like memory CD8(+) α/β T cells, Ly-6C(+)CD44(hi) γ/δ T cells are sparse in the thymus but largely increased in proportion in tissues. Second, similarly to naive CD8 α/β T cells, CD44(lo) γ/δ T cells are poorly cycling in vivo in the steady state, and their proportion declines with age in secondary lymphoid organs. Third, CD44(lo) γ/δ T cells undergo spontaneous proliferation and convert to a memory-like Ly-6C(+)CD44(hi) phenotype in response to lymphopenia. Finally, CD44(lo) γ/δ T cells have an intrinsic high plasticity as, upon appropriate stimulation, they are capable of differentiating nonetheless into Th17-like and Th1-like cells but also into fully functional Foxp3(+) induced regulatory T cell-like γ/δ T cells. Thus, peripheral CD27(+) γ/δ T cells, commonly considered as a functionally related T cell compartment, actually share many common features with adaptive α/β T cells, as both lineages include naive-like and memory-like lymphocytes with distinct phenotypic, functional, and homeostatic characteristics.
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