CD11b expression as a marker to distinguish between recently activated effector CD8+ T cells and memory cells

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Abstract

CD8+ T cells in different activation states have difficult to identify phenotypically. In this study we have investigated whether Mac-1 (CD11b) expression can be used as a criterion to distinguish between recently activated effector cells and memory cells belonging to the CD8+ T cell subset. Polyclonal virus-specific effector and memory CD8+ T cells from lymphocytic chorlomeningitis- and vesicular stomatitis virus-infected mice were visualized through staining for intracellular IFN-γ or binding of MHC-peptide tetramers, and Mac-1 expression was evaluated. Naive T cells and most virus-specific memory CD8+ T cells little or no Mac-1 independent of the virus model employed. In contrast, the majority of CD8+ T cells present during acute infection express a significant level of Mac-1 and, similarly, Mac-1 expression is found on secondary effectors generated in response to viral re-exposure. We therefore suggest that high Mac-1 expression defines a subset of circulating effector cells and that the presence of this marker on antigen-specific CD8+ T cells signifies recent activation.

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APA

Christensen, J. E., Andreasen, S., Christensen, J. P., & Thomsen, A. R. (2001). CD11b expression as a marker to distinguish between recently activated effector CD8+ T cells and memory cells. International Immunology, 13(4), 593–600. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/13.4.593

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