Publication | Closed Access
Recruitment of Antigen-Specific CD8 <sup>+</sup> T Cells in Response to Infection Is Markedly Efficient
147
Citations
15
References
2009
Year
Adaptive Immune SystemT-regulatory CellNaïve T CellsImmunologyImmune RegulationAntigen ProcessingCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmune SystemImmunotherapyImmunological MemoryRegulatory T Cell BiologyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityAntigen-specific T CellsCell BiologyAdaptive ImmunityT Cell BiologyCellular Immune ResponseClonal ExpansionMedicineViral Immunity
The magnitude of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses is not fixed but correlates with the severity of infection. Although by definition T cell response size is the product of both the capacity to recruit naïve T cells (clonal selection) and their subsequent proliferation (clonal expansion), it remains undefined how these two factors regulate antigen-specific T cell responses. We determined the relative contribution of recruitment and expansion by labeling naïve T cells with unique genetic tags and transferring them into mice. Under disparate infection conditions with different pathogens and doses, recruitment of antigen-specific T cells was near constant and close to complete. Thus, naïve T cell recruitment is highly efficient, and the magnitude of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses is primarily controlled by clonal expansion.
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