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Quantifying Memory CD8 T Cells Reveals Regionalization of Immunosurveillance
Author(s) -
Elizabeth M. Steinert,
Jason M. Schenkel,
Kathryn Fraser,
Lalit K. Beura,
Luke S. Manlove,
Botond Z. Igyártó,
Peter J. Southern,
David Masopust
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2015.03.031
Subject(s) - biology , immunosurveillance , population , effector , cd8 , immunology , microbiology and biotechnology , cytotoxic t cell , memory t cell , neuroscience , immune system , genetics , demography , sociology , in vitro
Memory CD8 T cells protect against intracellular pathogens by scanning host cell surfaces; thus, infection detection rates depend on memory cell number and distribution. Population analyses rely on cell isolation from whole organs, and interpretation is predicated on presumptions of near complete cell recovery. Paradigmatically, memory is parsed into central, effector, and resident subsets, ostensibly defined by immunosurveillance patterns but in practice identified by phenotypic markers. Because isolation methods ultimately inform models of memory T cell differentiation, protection, and vaccine translation, we tested their validity via parabiosis and quantitative immunofluorescence microscopy of a mouse memory CD8 T cell population. We report three major findings: lymphocyte isolation fails to recover most cells and biases against certain subsets, residents greatly outnumber recirculating cells within non-lymphoid tissues, and memory subset homing to inflammation does not conform to previously hypothesized migration patterns. These results indicate that most host cells are surveyed for reinfection by segregated residents rather than by recirculating cells that migrate throughout the blood and body.

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