T cell effector function and anergy avoidance are quantitatively linked to cell division

AD Wells, MC Walsh, D Sankaran… - The Journal of …, 2000 - journals.aai.org
AD Wells, MC Walsh, D Sankaran, LA Turka
The Journal of Immunology, 2000journals.aai.org
We have shown previously that T cells activated by optimal TCR and CD28 ligation exhibit
marked proliferative heterogeneity, and∼ 40% of these activated cells fail entirely to
participate in clonal expansion. To address how prior cell division influences the subsequent
function of primary T cells at the single cell level, primary CD4+ T cells were subjected to
polyclonal stimulation, sorted based on the number of cell divisions they had undergone,
and restimulated by ligation of TCR/CD28. We find that individual CD4+ T cells exhibit …
Abstract
We have shown previously that T cells activated by optimal TCR and CD28 ligation exhibit marked proliferative heterogeneity, and∼ 40% of these activated cells fail entirely to participate in clonal expansion. To address how prior cell division influences the subsequent function of primary T cells at the single cell level, primary CD4+ T cells were subjected to polyclonal stimulation, sorted based on the number of cell divisions they had undergone, and restimulated by ligation of TCR/CD28. We find that individual CD4+ T cells exhibit distinct secondary response patterns that depend upon their prior division history, such that cells that undergo more rounds of division show incrementally greater IL-2 production and proliferation in response to restimulation. CD4+ T cells that fail to divide after activation exist in a profoundly hyporesponsive state that is refractory to both TCR/CD28-mediated and IL-2R-mediated proliferative signals. We find that this anergic state is associated with defects in both TCR-coupled activation of the p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2) and IL-2-mediated down-regulation of the cell cycle inhibitor p27 kip1. However, these defects are selective, as TCR-mediated intracellular calcium flux and IL-2R-coupled STAT5 activation remain intact in these cells. Therefore, the process of cell division or cell cycle progression plays an integral role in anergy avoidance in primary T cells, and may represent a driving force in the formation of the effector/memory T cell pool.
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