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IKK2/NFkB signaling controls lung resident CD8+ T cell memory during influenza infection

13

Citations

56

References

2023

Year

Abstract

CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell tissue resident memory (T<sub>RM</sub>) cells are especially suited to control pathogen spread at mucosal sites. However, their maintenance in lung is short-lived. TCR-dependent NFkB signaling is crucial for T cell memory but how and when NFkB signaling modulates tissue resident and circulating T cell memory during the immune response is unknown. Here, we find that enhancing NFkB signaling in T cells once memory to influenza is established, increases pro-survival Bcl-2 and CD122 levels thus boosting lung CD8<sup>+</sup> T<sub>RM</sub> maintenance. By contrast, enhancing NFkB signals during the contraction phase of the response leads to a defect in CD8<sup>+</sup> T<sub>RM</sub> differentiation without impairing recirculating memory subsets. Specifically, inducible activation of NFkB via constitutive active IKK2 or TNF interferes with TGFβ signaling, resulting in defects of lung CD8<sup>+</sup> T<sub>RM</sub> imprinting molecules CD69, CD103, Runx3 and Eomes. Conversely, inhibiting NFkB signals not only recovers but improves the transcriptional signature and generation of lung CD8<sup>+</sup> T<sub>RM</sub>. Thus, NFkB signaling is a critical regulator of tissue resident memory, whose levels can be tuned at specific times during infection to boost lung CD8<sup>+</sup> T<sub>RM</sub>.

References

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