Abstract
Infection elicits CD4+ memory T lymphocytes that participate in protective immunity. Although memory cells are the progeny of naïve T cells, it is unclear that all naïve cells from a polyclonal repertoire have memory cell potential. Using a single-cell adoptive transfer and spleen biopsy method, we found that in mice, essentially all microbe-specific naïve cells produced memory cells during infection. Different clonal memory cell populations had different B cell or macrophage helper compositions that matched effector cell populations generated much earlier in the response. Thus, each microbe-specific naïve CD4+ T cell produces a distinctive ratio of effector cell types early in the immune response that is maintained as some cells in the clonal population become memory cells.
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CITATION STYLE
Tubo, N. J., Fife, B. T., Pagan, A. J., Kotov, D. I., Goldberg, M. F., & Jenkins, M. K. (2016). Most microbe-specific naïve CD4+ T cells produce memory cells during infection. Science, 351(6272), 511–514. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aad0483
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