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Attrition of bystander CD8 T cells during virus-induced T-cell and interferon responses

McNally, James M.
Zarozinski, Christopher C.
Lin, Meei Y.
Brehm, Michael A.
Chen, Hong D.
Welsh, Raymond M.
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Student Authors
James M.�McNally
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
Immunology and Virology
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
2001-06-08
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Abstract

Experiments designed to distinguish virus-specific from non-virus-specific T cells showed that bystander T cells underwent apoptosis and substantial attrition in the wake of a strong T-cell response. Memory CD8 T cells (CD8(+) CD44(hi)) were most affected. During acute viral infection, transgenic T cells that were clearly defined as non-virus specific decreased in number and showed an increase in apoptosis. Also, use of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) carrier mice, which lack LCMV-specific T cells, showed a significant decline in non-virus-specific memory CD8 T cells that correlated to an increase in apoptosis in response to the proliferation of adoptively transferred virus-specific T cells. Attrition of T cells early during infection correlated with the alpha/beta interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) peak, and the IFN inducer poly(I:C) caused apoptosis and attrition of CD8(+) CD44(hi) T cells in normal mice but not in IFN-alpha/beta receptor-deficient mice. Apoptotic attrition of bystander T cells may make room for the antigen-specific expansion of T cells during infection and may, in part, account for the loss of T-cell memory that occurs when the host undergoes subsequent infections.

Source

J Virol. 2001 Jul;75(13):5965-76. Link to article on publisher's site

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DOI
10.1128/JVI.75.13.5965-5976.2001
PubMed ID
11390598
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