4.7 Article

IL-21 from high-affinity CD4 T cells drives differentiation of brain-resident CD8 T cells during persistent viral infection

Journal

SCIENCE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 5, Issue 51, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abb5590

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the NIH [R01NS088367, R01NS092662, R01AI147641, R01AI091670, F32NS106730, F31AI142997]
  3. Penn State College of Medicine Finkelstein Memorial Student Research Award
  4. University of Utah Flow Cytometry Facility [5P30CA042014-24]
  5. National Center for Research Resources of the National Institute of Health [1S10RR026802-01]

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Development of tissue-resident memory (T-RM) CD8 T cells depends on CD4 T cells. In polyomavirus central nervous system infection, brain CXCR5(hi) PD-1(hi) CD4 T cells produce interleukin-21 (IL-21), and CD8 T cells lacking IL-21 receptors (IL21R(-/-)) fail to become bT(RM). IL-21(+) CD4 T cells exhibit elevated T cell receptor (TCR) affinity and higher TCR density. IL21R(-/-) brain CD8 T cells do not express CD103, depend on vascular CD8 T cells for maintenance, are antigen recall defective, and lack T-RM core signature genes. CD4 T cell-deficient and IL21R(-/-) brain CD8 T cells show similar deficiencies in expression of genes for oxidative metabolism, and intrathecal delivery of IL-21 to CD4 T cell-depleted mice restores expression of electron transport genes in CD8 T cells to wild-type levels. Thus, high-affinity CXCR5(hi) PD-1(hi) CD4 T cells in the brain produce IL-21, which drives CD8 bT(RM) differentiation in response to a persistent viral infection.

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