In practice, vaccines should induce lasting and efficacious T cell immunity without promoting deleterious pathological consequences. To accomplish this goal we immunized mice with ovalbumin peptide, polyinosinic-polycytidylic and anti-CD137. Vaccinated mice retained a massive functional CD8 T cell memory pool in lymphoid and non-lymphoid tissues for >1 year. The memory T cells clonally expanded, produced substantial amounts of IFNγ, and responded vigorously to vesicular stomatitis virus infection. To understand how the vaccine might function, we showed that the antigen-specific T cells must bear CD137 in order for optimal priming to occur. Thus, anti-CD137 agonist mAb directly stimulated peptide-specific CD8 T cells and conditioned them to survive. In contrast, CD137-deficient CD8 T cells did not survive despite CD137 expression by antigen presenting cells. Taken together, the data indicate that CD137 and adjuvant combined therapy is an efficacious vaccine strategy for immunization with non-replicating inert antigen. © The Japanese Society for Immunology. 2005. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Myers, L., Lee, S. W., Rossi, R. J., Lefrancois, L., Kwon, B. S., Mittler, R. S., … Vella, A. T. (2006). Combined CD137 (4-1BB) and adjuvant therapy generates a developing pool of peptide-specific CD8 memory T cells. International Immunology, 18(2), 325–333. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxh371
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