Literature DB >> 25127860

Differences in the transduction of canonical Wnt signals demarcate effector and memory CD8 T cells with distinct recall proliferation capacity.

Caroline Boudousquié1, Maxime Danilo1, Laurène Pousse1, Beena Jeevan-Raj1, Georgi S Angelov1, Vijaykumar Chennupati2, Dietmar Zehn2, Werner Held3.   

Abstract

Protection against reinfection is mediated by Ag-specific memory CD8 T cells, which display stem cell-like function. Because canonical Wnt (Wingless/Int1) signals critically regulate renewal versus differentiation of adult stem cells, we evaluated Wnt signal transduction in CD8 T cells during an immune response to acute infection with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. Whereas naive CD8 T cells efficiently transduced Wnt signals, at the peak of the primary response to infection only a fraction of effector T cells retained signal transduction and the majority displayed strongly reduced Wnt activity. Reduced Wnt signaling was in part due to the downregulation of Tcf-1, one of the nuclear effectors of the pathway, and coincided with progress toward terminal differentiation. However, the correlation between low and high Wnt levels with short-lived and memory precursor effector cells, respectively, was incomplete. Adoptive transfer studies showed that low and high Wnt signaling did not influence cell survival but that Wnt high effectors yielded memory cells with enhanced proliferative potential and stronger protective capacity. Likewise, following adoptive transfer and rechallenge, memory cells with high Wnt levels displayed increased recall expansion, compared with memory cells with low Wnt signaling, which were preferentially effector-like memory cells, including tissue-resident memory cells. Thus, canonical Wnt signaling identifies CD8 T cells with enhanced proliferative potential in part independent of commonly used cell surface markers to discriminate effector and memory T cell subpopulations. Interventions that maintain Wnt signaling may thus improve the formation of functional CD8 T cell memory during vaccination.
Copyright © 2014 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25127860     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1400465

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  16 in total

1.  Visualization of granzyme B-expressing CD8 T cells during primary and secondary immune responses to Listeria monocytogenes.

Authors:  Pierre Mouchacca; Lionel Chasson; Melissa Frick; Chloé Foray; Anne-Marie Schmitt-Verhulst; Claude Boyer
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2015-05       Impact factor: 7.397

Review 2.  T memory stem cells in health and disease.

Authors:  Luca Gattinoni; Daniel E Speiser; Mathias Lichterfeld; Chiara Bonini
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2017-01-06       Impact factor: 53.440

3.  Asymmetric PI3K Signaling Driving Developmental and Regenerative Cell Fate Bifurcation.

Authors:  Wen-Hsuan W Lin; William C Adams; Simone A Nish; Yen-Hua Chen; Bonnie Yen; Nyanza J Rothman; Radomir Kratchmarov; Takaharu Okada; Ulf Klein; Steven L Reiner
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2015-11-25       Impact factor: 9.423

4.  Human Lymph Nodes Maintain TCF-1hi Memory T Cells with High Functional Potential and Clonal Diversity throughout Life.

Authors:  Michelle Miron; Brahma V Kumar; Wenzhao Meng; Tomer Granot; Dustin J Carpenter; Takashi Senda; Dora Chen; Aaron M Rosenfeld; Bochao Zhang; Harvey Lerner; Amy L Friedman; Uri Hershberg; Yufeng Shen; Adeeb Rahman; Eline T Luning Prak; Donna L Farber
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2018-08-15       Impact factor: 5.422

5.  Dickkopf-1 promotes hematopoietic regeneration via direct and niche-mediated mechanisms.

Authors:  Heather A Himburg; Phuong L Doan; Mamle Quarmyne; Xiao Yan; Joshua Sasine; Liman Zhao; Grace V Hancock; Jenny Kan; Katherine A Pohl; Evelyn Tran; Nelson J Chao; Jeffrey R Harris; John P Chute
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2016-12-05       Impact factor: 53.440

Review 6.  TCR Signaling in T Cell Memory.

Authors:  Mark A Daniels; Emma Teixeiro
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2015-12-10       Impact factor: 7.561

7.  TCF1+ hepatitis C virus-specific CD8+ T cells are maintained after cessation of chronic antigen stimulation.

Authors:  Dominik Wieland; Janine Kemming; Anita Schuch; Florian Emmerich; Percy Knolle; Christoph Neumann-Haefelin; Werner Held; Dietmar Zehn; Maike Hofmann; Robert Thimme
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-05-03       Impact factor: 14.919

8.  The transcription factor c-Myb regulates CD8+ T cell stemness and antitumor immunity.

Authors:  Sanjivan Gautam; Jessica Fioravanti; Wei Zhu; John B Le Gall; Philip Brohawn; Neal E Lacey; Jinhui Hu; James D Hocker; Nga Voong Hawk; Veena Kapoor; William G Telford; Devikala Gurusamy; Zhiya Yu; Avinash Bhandoola; Hai-Hui Xue; Rahul Roychoudhuri; Brandon W Higgs; Nicholas P Restifo; Timothy P Bender; Yun Ji; Luca Gattinoni
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2019-02-18       Impact factor: 25.606

9.  IL-21 Augments Rapamycin in Expansion of Alpha Fetoprotein Antigen Specific Stem-Cell-like Memory T Cells in vitro.

Authors:  Victor Tunje Jeza; Xiaoyi Li; Jun Chen; Zhihui Liang; Adem Onago Aggrey; Xiongwen Wu
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2017-06-30

10.  Antifungal Tc17 cells are durable and stable, persisting as long-lasting vaccine memory without plasticity towards IFNγ cells.

Authors:  Som Gowda Nanjappa; Andrew J McDermott; J Scott Fites; Kevin Galles; Marcel Wüthrich; George S Deepe; Bruce S Klein
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2017-05-22       Impact factor: 7.464

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