Vaccine-elicited memory CD4+ T cell expansion is impaired in the lungs during tuberculosis
Carpenter, Stephen M. ; Yang, Jason D. ; Lee, Jinhee ; Barreira-Silva, Palmira ; Behar, Samuel M
Citations
Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
Document Type
Publication Date
Subject Area
Embargo Expiration Date
Link to Full Text
Abstract
Immunological memory is the key biological process that makes vaccines possible. Although tuberculosis vaccines elicit protective immunity in animals, few provide durable protection. To understand why protection is transient, we evaluated the ability of memory CD4+ T cells to expand, differentiate, and control Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Both naive and memory CD4+ T cells initially proliferated exponentially, and the accumulation of memory T cells in the lung correlated with early bacterial control. However, later during infection, memory CD4+ T cell proliferation was curtailed and no protection was observed. We show that memory CD4+ T cells are first activated in the LN and their recruitment to the lung attenuates bacterial growth. However, their interaction with Mtb-infected macrophages does not promote continued proliferation. We conclude that a lack of sustained expansion by memory-derived T cells in the lung limits the durability of their protection, linking their slower expansion with transient protection in vaccinated mice.
Source
PLoS Pathog. 2017 Nov 27;13(11):e1006704. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006704. eCollection 2017 Nov. Link to article on publisher's site