| Literature DB >> 29909981 |
Norah L Smith1, Ravi K Patel2, Arnold Reynaldi3, Jennifer K Grenier4, Jocelyn Wang1, Neva B Watson1, Kito Nzingha1, Kristel J Yee Mon1, Seth A Peng1, Andrew Grimson2, Miles P Davenport3, Brian D Rudd5.
Abstract
Heterogeneity is a hallmark feature of the adaptive immune system in vertebrates. Following infection, naive T cells differentiate into various subsets of effector and memory T cells, which help to eliminate pathogens and maintain long-term immunity. The current model suggests there is a single lineage of naive T cells that give rise to different populations of effector and memory T cells depending on the type and amounts of stimulation they encounter during infection. Here, we have discovered that multiple sub-populations of cells exist in the naive CD8+ T cell pool that are distinguished by their developmental origin, unique transcriptional profiles, distinct chromatin landscapes, and different kinetics and phenotypes after microbial challenge. These data demonstrate that the naive CD8+ T cell pool is not as homogeneous as previously thought and offers a new framework for explaining the remarkable heterogeneity in the effector and memory T cell subsets that arise after infection.Entities:
Keywords: CD8(+) T cell; development; effector cell differentiation; epigenetics; homeostatic proliferation; immune ontogeny; immunological memory; neonate; post-thymic maturation; virtual memory cells
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29909981 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2018.05.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582