Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://10.1.7.192:80/jspui/handle/123456789/5419
Title: Resolution of infection promotes a state of dormancy and long survival of CD4 memory T cells
Authors: Dalai, Sarat K.
Khoruzhenko, Stanislav
Drake, Charles G.
Jie, Chunfa C.
Sadegh-Nasseri, Scheherazade
Keywords: B cell antigen presentation
Memory T cells
Anergy
Memory T cells survival
Microarray; BCRMediated Antigen Capture
CD4 memory T cells
Gene Regulation
Low-Dose Antigen
Memory Survival
Issue Date: Nov-2011
Publisher: Immuno Cell Biology
Abstract: Memory T cells survive throughout the lifetime of an individual and are protective upon recall. It is not clear how memory T cells can live so long. Here, we demonstrate that at the resolution of a viral infection, low levels of antigen are captured by B cells and presented to specific CD4+ memory T cells to render a state of unresponsiveness. We demonstrate in two systems that this process occurs naturally during the fall of antigen and is associated with a global gene expression program initiated with the clearance of antigen. Our study suggests that in the absence of antigen, a state of dormancy associated with low energy utilization and proliferation can help memory CD4+ T cells to survive nearly throughout the lifetime of mice. The dormant CD4+ memory T cells become activated by stimulatory signals generated by a subsequent infection. We propose that quiescence might be a mechanism necessary to regulate long-term survival of CD4 memory T cells and to prevent cross-reactivity to self, hence autoimmunity.
Description: Immunol Cell Biol. 2011 November ; 89(8): 870–881. doi:10.1038/icb.2011.2.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/5419
Appears in Collections:Faculty Papers

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