Publication | Open Access
Induction and Maintenance of CX3CR1-Intermediate Peripheral Memory CD8+ T Cells by Persistent Viruses and Vaccines
63
Citations
24
References
2018
Year
The induction and maintenance of T cell memory is critical to the success of vaccines. A recently described subset of memory CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells defined by intermediate expression of the chemokine receptor CX3CR1 was shown to have self-renewal, proliferative, and tissue-surveillance properties relevant to vaccine-induced memory. We tracked these cells when memory is sustained at high levels: memory inflation induced by cytomegalovirus (CMV) and adenovirus-vectored vaccines. In mice, both CMV and vaccine-induced inflationary T cells showed sustained high levels of CX3R1<sup>int</sup> cells exhibiting an effector-memory phenotype, characteristic of inflationary pools, in early memory. In humans, CX3CR1<sup>int</sup> CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells were strongly induced following adenovirus-vectored vaccination for hepatitis C virus (HCV) (ChAd3-NSmut) and during natural CMV infection and were associated with a memory phenotype similar to that in mice. These data indicate that CX3CR1<sup>int</sup> cells form an important component of the memory pool in response to persistent viruses and vaccines in both mice and humans.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1