Innate acting memory Th1 cells modulate heterologous diseases

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Abstract

Through immune memory, infections have a lasting effect on the host. While memory cells enable accelerated and enhanced responses upon rechallenge with the same pathogen, their impact on susceptibility to unrelated diseases is unclear. We identify a subset of memory T helper 1 (Th1) cells termed innate acting memory T (TIA) cells that originate from a viral infection and produce IFN-γ with innate kinetics upon heterologous challenge in vivo. Activation of memory TIA cells is induced in response to IL-12 in combination with IL-18 or IL-33 but is TCR independent. Rapid IFN-γ production by memory TIA cells is protective in subsequent heterologous challenge with the bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila. In contrast, antigen-independent reactivation of CD4+ memory TIA cells accelerates disease onset in an autoimmune model of multiple sclerosis. Our findings demonstrate that memory Th1 cells can acquire additional TCR-independent functionality to mount rapid, innate-like responses that modulate susceptibility to heterologous challenges.

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APA

Rakebrandt, N., Yassini, N., Kolz, A., Schorer, M., Lambert, K., Goljat, E., … Joller, N. (2024). Innate acting memory Th1 cells modulate heterologous diseases. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(24). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2312837121

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