| Literature DB >> 27829149 |
Wen-Hsuan W Lin1, Simone A Nish1, Bonnie Yen1, Yen-Hua Chen1, William C Adams1, Radomir Kratchmarov1, Nyanza J Rothman1, Avinash Bhandoola2, Hai-Hui Xue3, Steven L Reiner4.
Abstract
Selected CD8+ T cells must divide, produce differentiated effector cells, and self-renew, often repeatedly. We now show that silencing expression of the transcription factor TCF1 marks loss of self-renewal by determined effector cells and that this requires cell division. In acute infections, the first three CD8+ T cell divisions produce daughter cells with unequal proliferative signaling but uniform maintenance of TCF1 expression. The more quiescent initial daughter cells resemble canonical central memory cells. The more proliferative, effector-prone cells from initial divisions can subsequently undergo division-dependent production of a TCF1-negative effector daughter cell along with a self-renewing TCF1-positive daughter cell, the latter also contributing to the memory cell pool upon resolution of infection. Self-renewal in the face of effector cell determination may promote clonal amplification and memory cell formation in acute infections, sustain effector regeneration during persistent subclinical infections, and be rate limiting, but remediable, in chronic active infections and cancer.Entities:
Keywords: T cell; TCF1; Tcf7; asymmetric division; lymphocyte; memory; metabolism; progenitor; self-renewal; stem cell
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27829149 PMCID: PMC5108530 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.10.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423