Four Functionally Distinct Populations of Human Effector-Memory CD8+ T Lymphocytes

Pedro Romero(University Hospital of Lausanne), Alfred Zippelius(University Hospital of Lausanne), Isabel Kurth(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Mikaël J. Pittet(Harvard University), Cédric Touvrey(University Hospital of Lausanne), Emanuela M. Iancu(Swiss Group For Clinical Cancer Research), Patricia Corthésy(Swiss Group For Clinical Cancer Research), Estelle Devêvre(University Hospital of Lausanne), Daniel E. Speiser(University Hospital of Lausanne), Nathalie Rufer(Swiss Group For Clinical Cancer Research)
The Journal of Immunology
April 1, 2007
Cited by 402Open Access
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Abstract

In humans, the pathways of memory and effector T cell differentiation remain poorly defined. We have dissected the functional properties of ex vivo effector-memory (EM) CD45RA-CCR7- T lymphocytes present within the circulating CD8+ T cell pool of healthy individuals. Our studies show that EM T cells are heterogeneous and are subdivided based on differential CD27 and CD28 expression into four subsets. EM(1) (CD27+CD28+) and EM(4) (CD27-CD28+) T cells express low levels of effector mediators such as granzyme B and perforin and high levels of CD127/IL-7Ralpha. EM(1) cells also have a relatively short replicative history and display strong ex vivo telomerase activity. Therefore, these cells are closely related to central-memory (CD45RA-CCR7+) cells. In contrast, EM(2) (CD27+CD28-) and EM(3) (CD27-CD28-) cells express mediators characteristic of effector cells, whereby EM(3) cells display stronger ex vivo cytolytic activity and have experienced larger numbers of cell divisions, thus resembling differentiated effector (CD45RA+CCR7-) cells. These data indicate that progressive up-regulation of cytolytic activity and stepwise loss of CCR7, CD28, and CD27 both characterize CD8+ T cell differentiation. Finally, memory CD8+ T cells not only include central-memory cells but also EM(1) cells, which differ in CCR7 expression and may therefore confer memory functions in lymphoid and peripheral tissues, respectively.


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