| Literature DB >> 26485718 |
Alessia Galgano1, Aleksandr Barinov1, Florence Vasseur1, Jean-Pierre de Villartay2, Benedita Rocha1.
Abstract
Immune responses are efficient because the rare antigen-specific naïve cells are able to proliferate extensively and accumulate upon antigen stimulation. Moreover, differentiation into memory cells actually increases T cell accumulation, indicating improved productive division in secondary immune responses. These properties raise an important paradox: how T cells may survive the DNA lesions necessarily induced during their extensive division without undergoing transformation. We here present the first data addressing the DNA damage responses (DDRs) of CD8 T cells in vivo during exponential expansion in primary and secondary responses in mice. We show that during exponential division CD8 T cells engage unique DDRs, which are not present in other exponentially dividing cells, in T lymphocytes after UV or X irradiation or in non-metastatic tumor cells. While in other cell types a single DDR pathway is affected, all DDR pathways and cell cycle checkpoints are affected in dividing CD8 T cells. All DDR pathways collapse in secondary responses in the absence of CD4 help. CD8 T cells are driven to compulsive suicidal divisions preventing the propagation of DNA lesions. In contrast, in the presence of CD4 help all the DDR pathways are up regulated, resembling those present in metastatic tumors. However, this up regulation is present only during the expansion phase; i.e., their dependence on antigen stimulation prevents CD8 transformation. These results explain how CD8 T cells maintain genome integrity in spite of their extensive division, and highlight the fundamental role of DDRs in the efficiency of CD8 immune responses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26485718 PMCID: PMC4613136 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140849
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1DNA damage responses in CD8 T cells in the absence of CD4 help.
Results show the expression of genes involved in: (A) DNA damage checkpoints (sensors, mediators, transducers and effectors of double and single strand break (DSB; SSB)); (B) DSB repair mechanisms (non homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and homologous recombination (HR)); (C) SSB repair mechanisms (base excision repair (BER), nucleotide excision repair (NER), mismatch repair (MMR) and direct DNA repair (DDR)) were analyzed during primary and secondary CD8 responses generated in the absence of CD4 cells using mouse DNA damage signaling pathway and the DNA repair RT2 profiler PCR arrays (Qiagen). For each experiment, CD8 T cells were pooled from 4 mice in primary responses and 4–6 in secondary responses. The average expression level of unmodified housekeeping genes selected among the five included was used for normalization. Results are expressed as fold change relative to reference samples (naïve cells in primary responses; memory cells in secondary responses) and represent the average of 3 to 4 independent experiments. Primary responses are shown in blue; secondary responses in red. Up and down arrows indicate up and down regulation respectively; rectangles indicate no significant changes in gene expression. Asterisks indicate statistical significance: *, p < 0,05; **, p ≤ 0,01; ***, p ≤ 0,001.
Fig 2Comparison of DNA damage responses in CD8 T cell secondary proliferation in the absence and presence of CD4 T cells.
Results show the expression of genes involved in: (A) DNA damage checkpoints; (B) DSB repair and (C) SSB repair, analyzed during secondary CD8 responses generated in the absence and presence of CD4 cells. Analysis was performed using mouse DNA damage signaling pathway and DNA repair RT2 profiler PCR arrays (Qiagen). CD8 T cells were pooled from 4–6 mice for each experiment in absence of CD4s and 3 mice in presence of CD4s. Results were normalized as described in Fig 1, expressed as fold change relative to memory cells. They represent the average of 4 to 5 independent experiments. Responses without CD4s are shown in red; with CD4s in green. Up and down arrows indicate up and down regulation, respectively; rectangles indicate no significant changes in gene expression. Asterisks indicate statistical significance: *, p < 0,05; **, p ≤ 0,01; ***, p ≤ 0,001.