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Human memory CD8 T cell effector potential is epigenetically preserved during in vivo homeostasis

143

Citations

44

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Antigen-independent homeostasis of memory CD8 T cells is vital for sustaining long-lived T cell-mediated immunity. In this study, we report that maintenance of human memory CD8 T cell effector potential during in vitro and in vivo homeostatic proliferation is coupled to preservation of acquired DNA methylation programs. Whole-genome bisulfite sequencing of primary human naive, short-lived effector memory (T<sub>EM</sub>), and longer-lived central memory (T<sub>CM</sub>) and stem cell memory (T<sub>SCM</sub>) CD8 T cells identified effector molecules with demethylated promoters and poised for expression. Effector-loci demethylation was heritably preserved during IL-7- and IL-15-mediated in vitro cell proliferation. Conversely, cytokine-driven proliferation of T<sub>CM</sub> and T<sub>SCM</sub> memory cells resulted in phenotypic conversion into T<sub>EM</sub> cells and was coupled to increased methylation of the CCR7 and Tcf7 loci. Furthermore, haploidentical donor memory CD8 T cells undergoing in vivo proliferation in lymphodepleted recipients also maintained their effector-associated demethylated status but acquired T<sub>EM</sub>-associated programs. These data demonstrate that effector-associated epigenetic programs are preserved during cytokine-driven subset interconversion of human memory CD8 T cells.

References

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