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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Differential requirements for antigen or homeostatic cytokines for proliferation and differentiation of human Vgamma9Vdelta2 naive, memory and effector T cell subsets.
Giovanna BorsellinoAlfredo SalernoViviana FerlazzoFabrizio PocciaFrancesco DieliSerena MeravigliaDaniela F. AngeliniNadia CaccamoLuca Battistinisubject
medicine.medical_treatmentT cellCellular differentiationImmunologychemical and pharmacologic phenomenaBiologyLymphocyte ActivationAntigenimmune system diseasesT-Lymphocyte SubsetsmedicineImmunology and AllergyHomeostasisHumansAntigensReceptorCells CulturedInterleukin-15Receptors Interleukin-15virus diseaseshemic and immune systemsCell DifferentiationReceptors Antigen T-Cell gamma-deltaReceptors Interleukin-2In vitroCell biologyTumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily Member 7Cytokinemedicine.anatomical_structureInterleukin 15CytokinesLeukocyte Common AntigensImmunologic MemoryEx vivodescription
We have compared four human subsets of Vgamma9Vdelta2 T cells, naive (T(naive), CD45RA(+)CD27(+)), central memory (T(CM), CD45RA(-)CD27(+)), effector memory (T(EM), CD45RA(-)CD27(-)) and terminally differentiated (T(EMRA), CD45RA(+)CD27(-)), for their capacity to proliferate and differentiate in response to antigen or homeostatic cytokines. Cytokine responsiveness and IL-15R expression were low in T(naive) cells and progressively increased from T(CM) to T(EM) and T(EMRA) cells. In contrast, the capacity to expand in response to antigen or cytokine stimulation showed a reciprocal pattern and was associated with resistance to cell death and Bcl-2 expression. Whereas antigen-stimulated cells acquired a T(CM) or T(EM) phenotype, IL-15-stimulated cells maintained their phenotype, with the exception of T(CM) cells, which expressed CD27 and CD45RA in various combinations. These results, together with ex vivo bromodeoxyuridine incorporation experiments, show that human Vgamma9Vdelta2 memory T cells have different proliferation and differentiation potentials in vitro and in vivo and that T(EMRA) cells are generated from the T(CM) subset upon homeostatic proliferation in the absence of antigen.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-05-26 | European journal of immunology |