Cutting Edge: Local Recall Responses by Memory T Cells Newly Recruited to Peripheral Nonlymphoid Tissues
- 1 November 2008
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 181 (9) , 5837-5841
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.181.9.5837
Abstract
Infection results in the formation of a circulating effector memory T cell population able to enter peripheral tissues either in the steady state or in response to localized infection. As a consequence, recall is thought to result from a phased response first involving those T cells already at the site of infection followed by the infiltration of memory cells from the wider circulation. We have recently reported that tissue-resident T cells can undergo stimulation and proliferation in response to local infection. In this study, we examine the proliferation of memory T cells newly recruited from the circulation. Our results show that although recruitment of circulating memory cells is nonspecific in nature, there is preferential proliferation of specific T cells within infected tissues. Thus, expansion represents a means of local Ag-specific enrichment of T cells recruited from a circulating memory pool of mixed specificities.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dendritic Cell-Induced Memory T Cell Activation in Nonlymphoid TissuesScience, 2008
- T‐cell memory and recall responses to respiratory virus infectionsImmunological Reviews, 2006
- Preferential Accumulation of Antigen-specific Effector CD4 T Cells at an Antigen Injection Site Involves CD62E-dependent Migration but Not Local ProliferationThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2003
- Lineage relationship and protective immunity of memory CD8 T cell subsetsNature Immunology, 2003
- Attrition of Bystander CD8 T Cells during Virus-Induced T-Cell and Interferon ResponsesJournal of Virology, 2001
- Preferential Localization of Effector Memory Cells in Nonlymphoid TissueScience, 2001
- Attrition of T Cell MemoryImmunity, 1999
- Two subsets of memory T lymphocytes with distinct homing potentials and effector functionsNature, 1999
- Reduction of otherwise remarkably stable virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte memory by heterologous viral infections.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Immunological Memory and Protective Immunity: Understanding Their RelationScience, 1996