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Origin and differentiation of human memory CD8 T cells after vaccination.

Authors :
Akondy, Rama S.
Fitch, Mark
Edupuganti, Srilatha
Yang, Shu
Kissick, Haydn T.
Li, Kelvin W.
Youngblood, Ben A.
Abdelsamed, Hossam A.
McGuire, Donald J.
Cohen, Kristen W.
Alexe, Gabriela
Nagar, Shashi
McCausland, Megan M.
Gupta, Satish
Tata, Pramila
Haining, W. Nicholas
McElrath, M. Juliana
Zhang, David
Hu, Bin
Greenleaf, William J.
Source :
Nature; 12/21/2017, Vol. 552 Issue 7685, p362-367, 6p, 14 Graphs
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The differentiation of human memory CD8 T cells is not well understood. Here we address this issue using the live yellow fever virus (YFV) vaccine, which induces long-term immunity in humans. We used in vivo deuterium labelling to mark CD8 T cells that proliferated in response to the virus and then assessed cellular turnover and longevity by quantifying deuterium dilution kinetics in YFV-specific CD8 T cells using mass spectrometry. This longitudinal analysis showed that the memory pool originates from CD8 T cells that divided extensively during the first two weeks after infection and is maintained by quiescent cells that divide less than once every year (doubling time of over 450 days). Although these long-lived YFV-specific memory CD8 T cells did not express effector molecules, their epigenetic landscape resembled that of effector CD8 T cells. This open chromatin profile at effector genes was maintained in memory CD8 T cells isolated even a decade after vaccination, indicating that these cells retain an epigenetic fingerprint of their effector history and remain poised to respond rapidly upon re-exposure to the pathogen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
552
Issue :
7685
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128843948
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature24633