Viral antigen and extensive division maintain virus-specific CD8 T cells during chronic infection

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Abstract

Efficient maintenance of memory CD8 T cells is central to long-term protective immunity. IL-7- and IL-15-driven homeostatic proliferation is essential for long-term memory CD8 T cell persistence after acute infections. During chronic infections, however, virus-specific CD8 T cells respond poorly to these cytokines. Yet, virus-specific CD8 T cells often persist for long periods of time during chronic infections. We have addressed this apparent paradox by examining the mechanism for maintaining virus-specific CD8 T cells during chronic infection. We find that homeostatic cytokines (e.g., IL-7/15), inflammatory signals, and priming of recent thymic emigrants are not sufficient to maintain virus-specific CD8 T cells over time during chronic infection. Rather, our results demonstrate that viral peptide is required for virus-specific CD8 T cell persistence during chronic infection. Moreover, this viral antigen-dependent maintenance results in a dramatically different type of T cell division than is normally observed during memory T cell homeostasis. Rather than undergoing slow, steady homeostatic turnover during chronic viral infection, CD8 T cells undergo extensive peptide-dependent division, yet cell numbers remain relatively stable. These results indicate that antigen-specific CD8 T cell responses during persisting infection are maintained by a mechanism distinct from that after acute infection. JEM © The Rockefeller University Press.

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Shin, H., Blackburn, S. D., Blattman, J. N., & Wherry, E. J. (2007). Viral antigen and extensive division maintain virus-specific CD8 T cells during chronic infection. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 204(4), 941–949. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20061937

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