Although clonal expansion is a hallmark of adaptive immunity, the location(s) where antigen-responding T cells enter cell cycle and complete it have been poorly explored. This lack of knowledge stems partially from the limited experimental approaches available. By using Ki67 plus DNA staining and a novel strategy for flow cytometry analysis, we distinguished antigen-specific CD8 T cells in G0, in G1 and in S-G2/M phases of cell cycle after intramuscular vaccination of BALB/c mice with antigen-expressing viral vectors. Antigen-specific cells in S-G2/M were present at early times after vaccination in lymph nodes (LNs), spleen and, surprisingly, also in the blood, which is an unexpected site for cycling of normal non-leukaemic cells. Most proliferating cells had high scatter profile and were undetected by current criteria of analysis, which under-estimated up to 6 times antigen-specific cell frequency in LNs. Our discovery of cycling antigen-specific CD8 T cells in the blood opens promising translational perspectives.
CITATION STYLE
Simonetti, S., Natalini, A., Folgori, A., Capone, S., Nicosia, A., Santoni, A., & Di Rosa, F. (2019). Antigen-specific CD8 T cells in cell cycle circulate in the blood after vaccination. Scandinavian Journal of Immunology, 89(2). https://doi.org/10.1111/sji.12735
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