Memory CD4+ T-cell-mediated protection depends on secondary effectors that are distinct from and superior to primary effectors

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Abstract

Whether differences between naive cell-derived primary (1°) and memory cell-derived secondary (2°) CD4+ T-cell effectors contribute to protective recall responses is unclear. Here, we compare these effectors directly after influenza A virus infection. Both develop with similar kinetics, but 2° effectors accumulate in greater number in the infected lung and are the critical component of memory CD4+ T-cell-mediated protection against influenza A virus, independent of earlier-acting memory-cell helper functions. Phenotypic, functional, and transcriptome analyses indicate that 2° effectors share organ-specific expression patterns with 1° effectors but are more multifunctional, with more multicytokine (IFN-γ+/ IL-2+/TNF+)-producing cells and contain follicular helper T-cell populations not only in the spleen and draining lymph nodes but also in the lung. In addition, they express more CD127 and NKG2A but less ICOS and Lag-3 than 1° effectors and express higher levels of several genes associated with survival and migration. Targeting two differentially expressed molecules, NKG2A and Lag-3, reveals differential regulation of 1° and 2° effector functions during pathogen challenge.

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Strutt, T. M., McKinstry, K. K., Kuang, Y., Bradley, L. M., & Swain, S. L. (2012). Memory CD4+ T-cell-mediated protection depends on secondary effectors that are distinct from and superior to primary effectors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(38). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1205894109

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