On the role of antigen in maintaining cytotoxic T-cell memory.
- 3 September 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (18) , 9716-9723
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.18.9716
Abstract
This study evaluated whether T-cell memory reflects increased precursor frequencies of specific long-lived T cells and/or a low-level immune response against some form of persistent antigen. Antivirally protective CD8+ T-cell memory was analyzed mostly in the original vaccinated host to assess the role of antigen in its maintenance. T-cell mediated resistance against reinfection was measured in the spleen and in peripheral solid organs with protocols that excluded protection by antibodies. In vivo protection was compared with detectable cytotoxic T-lymphocyte precursor frequencies determined in vitro. In the spleen, in vitro detectable cytotoxic T-lymphocyte precursor frequencies remained stable independently of antigen, conferring resistance against viral replication in the spleen during reinfection. In contrast, T-cell mediated resistance against reinfection of peripheral solid organs faded away in an antigen-dependent fashion within a few days or weeks. We show that only memory T cells persistently or freshly activated with antigen efficiently extravasate into peripheral organs, where cytotoxic T lymphocytes must be able to exert effector function immediately; both the capacity to extravasate and to rapidly exert effector function critically depend on restimulation by antigen. Our experiments document that the duration of T-cell memory protective against peripheral reinfection depended on the antigen dose used for immunization, was prolonged when additional antigen was provided, and was abrogated after removal of antigen. We conclude that T-cell mediated protective immunity against the usual peripheral routes of reinfection is antigen-dependent.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- On T Cell Memory: Arguments for Antigen DependenceImmunological Reviews, 1996
- ON IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORYAnnual Review of Immunology, 1996
- Turnover of naive- and memory-phenotype T cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1994
- T and B memory cellsCell, 1994
- T-cell memory: the connection between function, phenotype and migration pathwaysImmunology Today, 1991
- Analysis of the kinetics of antiviral memory T help in vivo: characterization of short‐lived cross‐reactive T helpEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1990
- Isolation of an endogenously processed immunodominant viral peptide from the class I H–2Kb moleculeNature, 1990
- Maintenance of B-cell memory by long-lived cells generated from proliferating precursorsNature, 1990
- T helper cells in cytotoxic T lymphocyte development: Role of L3T4+-dependent and -independent T helper cell pathways in virus-specific and alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocyte responsesCellular Immunology, 1990
- Therapy with monoclonal antibodies by elimination of T-cell subsets in vivoNature, 1984