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Homeostasis and Effector Function of Lymphopenia-Induced “Memory-Like” T Cells in Constitutively T Cell-Depleted Mice
Author(s) -
David Voehringer,
Hong-Erh Liang,
Richard M. Locksley
Publication year - 2008
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.180.7.4742
Subject(s) - biology , cytotoxic t cell , immunology , adoptive cell transfer , cd8 , t cell , interleukin 21 , microbiology and biotechnology , immune system , in vitro , genetics
Naive T lymphocytes acquire a phenotype similar to Ag-experienced memory T cells as a result of proliferation under lymphopenic conditions. Such "memory-like" T (T(ML)) cells constitute a large fraction of the peripheral T cell pool in patients recovering from T cell ablative therapies, HIV patients under highly active antiretroviral therapy, and in the elderly population. To generate a model that allows characterization of T(ML) cells without adoptive transfer, irradiation, or thymectomy, we developed genetically modified mice that express diphtheria toxin A under control of a loxP-flanked stop cassette (R-DTA mice). Crossing these mice to CD4Cre mice resulted in efficient ablation of CD4 single-positive thymocytes, whereas double-positive and CD8 single-positive thymocytes were only partially affected. In the periphery the pool of naive (CD44(low)CD62L(high)) T cells was depleted. However, some T cells were resistant to Cre activity, escaped deletion in the thymus, and underwent lymphopenia-induced proliferation resulting in a pool of T(ML) cells that was similar in size and turnover to the pool of CD44(high)CD62L(low) "memory phenotype" T cells in control mice. CD4Cre/R-DTA mice remained lymphopenic despite the large available immunological "space" and normal Ag-induced T cell proliferation. CD4Cre/R-DTA mice showed a biased TCR repertoire indicating oligoclonal T cell expansion. Infection with the helminth Nippostrongylus brasiliensis resulted in diminished effector cell recruitment and impaired worm expulsion, demonstrating that T(ML) cells are not sufficient to mediate an effective immune response.

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