Distinct functions of antigen-specific CD4 T cells during murine<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>infection

William W. Reiley(Trudeau Institute), Shahin Shafiani(Wadsworth Center), Susan Wittmer(Trudeau Institute), Glady’s Tucker-Heard(Wadsworth Center), James Moon(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Marc K. Jenkins(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Kevin B. Urdahl(Wadsworth Center), Gary M. Winslow(Trudeau Institute), David L. Woodland(Trudeau Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 20, 2010
Cited by 178

Abstract

The immune response elicited after Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection is critically dependent on CD4 T cells during both acute and chronic infection. How CD4 T-cell responses are maintained throughout infection is not well understood, and evidence from other infection models has suggested that, under conditions of chronic antigen stimulation, T cells can undergo replicative exhaustion. These findings led us to determine whether subpopulations of CD4 T cells existed that displayed markers of terminal differentiation or exhaustion during murine Mtb infection. Analysis of antigen-specific effector CD4 T cells revealed that programmed death-1 (PD-1) and the killer cell lectin-like receptor G1 (KLRG1) delineated subpopulations of T cells. PD-1-expressing CD4 T cells were highly proliferative, whereas KLRG1 cells exhibited a short lifespan and secreted the cytokines IFNγ and TNFα. Adoptive transfer studies demonstrated that proliferating PD-1-positive CD4 T cells differentiated into cytokine-secreting KLRG1-positive T cells, but not vice versa. Thus, proliferating PD-1-positive cells are not exhausted, but appear to be central to maintaining antigen-specific effector T cells during chronic Mtb infection. Our findings suggest that antigen-specific T-cell responses are maintained during chronic mycobacterial infection through the continual production of terminal effector cells from a proliferating precursor population.


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