| Literature DB >> 24054328 |
Sarah E Henrickson1, Mario Perro, Scott M Loughhead, Balimkiz Senman, Susanne Stutte, Michael Quigley, Gabriela Alexe, Matteo Iannacone, Michael P Flynn, Shaida Omid, Jonathan L Jesneck, Sabrina Imam, Thorsten R Mempel, Irina B Mazo, W Nicholas Haining, Ulrich H von Andrian.
Abstract
T cells are activated by antigen (Ag)-bearing dendritic cells (DCs) in lymph nodes in three phases. The duration of the initial phase of transient, serial DC-T cell interactions is inversely correlated with Ag dose. The second phase, characterized by stable DC-T cell contacts, is believed to be necessary for full-fledged T cell activation. Here we have shown that this is not the case. CD8⁺ T cells interacting with DCs presenting low-dose, short-lived Ag did not transition to phase 2, whereas higher Ag dose yielded phase 2 transition. Both antigenic constellations promoted T cell proliferation and effector differentiation but yielded different transcriptome signatures at 12 hr and 24 hr. T cells that experienced phase 2 developed long-lived memory, whereas conditions without stable contacts yielded immunological amnesia. Thus, T cells make fate decisions within hours after Ag exposure, resulting in long-term memory or abortive effector responses, correlating with T cell-DCs interaction kinetics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24054328 PMCID: PMC3914670 DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2013.08.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunity ISSN: 1074-7613 Impact factor: 31.745