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      Antigen Is Required for the Activation of Effector Activities, whereas Interleukin 2 Is Required for the Maintenance of Memory in Ovalbumin-specific, CD8 + Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes

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      The Journal of Experimental Medicine
      The Rockefeller University Press

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          Abstract

          The mechanisms that maintain memory in T cells are not completely understood. We have investigated the role of antigen and interleukin (IL)-2 in the growth and maintenance of CD8 + T cells using a cytolytic T cell line specific for ovalbumin (OVA) 257-264 presented by H-2K b. This line does not secrete IL-4 or IL-2; hence, stimulation with the OVA-transfected EL4 line (E.G7-OVA) does not induce proliferation without addition of exogenous growth factors. Furthermore, this line can be maintained continuously by weekly addition of irradiated, splenic filler cells and IL-2, with or without E.G7-OVA. Although IL-2 induced proliferation of these cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), production of interferon γ and tumor necrosis factor α required stimulation of the CTL with E.G7-OVA. The kinetics of lymphokine secretion after stimulation by E.G7-OVA were the same whether the CTL had been maintained with or without antigen (Ag). In addition, both CTL lines killed E.G7-OVA target cells within 4 h. Thus, the effector functions of these CTLs were rapidly induced by T cell receptor (TCR) occupancy. CTLs cultured with or without Ag also served as memory T cells when parked for 100 d in unirradiated, syngeneic recipients without OVA. In the absence of OVA, the precursor frequency was identical in spleens of normal and β 2-microglobulin knockout recipients, but significantly less in IL-2 knockout mice. The decline of memory in the absence of IL-2 supports data from other investigators, suggesting that cell cycling is important to the maintenance of CD8 + T cell memory. These data also suggest that stimulation of OVA-specific CTLs by lymphokines seems to be more important to maintaining memory than stimulation of TCRs by cross-reactive peptides complexed to class I molecules.

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          Most cited references42

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          Immunological memory and protective immunity: understanding their relation.

          The immune system can remember, sometimes for a lifetime, the identity of a pathogen. Understanding how this is accomplished has fascinated immunologists and microbiologists for many years, but there is still considerable debate regarding the mechanisms by which long-term immunity is maintained. Some of the controversy stems from a failure to distinguish between effector and memory cells and to define their roles in conferring protection against disease. Here the current understanding of the cellular basis of immune memory is reviewed and the relative contributions made to protective immunity by memory and effector T and B cells are examined.
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            Induction of bystander T cell proliferation by viruses and type I interferon in vivo.

            T cell proliferation in vivo is presumed to reflect a T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated polyclonal response directed to various environmental antigens. However, the massive proliferation of T cells seen in viral infections is suggestive of a bystander reaction driven by cytokines instead of the TCR. In mice, T cell proliferation in viral infections preferentially affected the CD44hi subset of CD8+ cells and was mimicked by injection of polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid [poly(I:C)], an inducer of type I interferon (IFN I), and also by purified IFN I; such proliferation was not associated with up-regulation of CD69 or CD25 expression, which implies that TCR signaling was not involved. IFN I [poly(I:C)]-stimulated CD8+ cells survived for prolonged periods in vivo and displayed the same phenotype as did long-lived antigen-specific CD8+ cells. IFN I also potentiated the clonal expansion and survival of CD8+ cells responding to specific antigen. Production of IFN I may thus play an important role in the generation and maintenance of specific memory.
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              Introduction of soluble protein into the class I pathway of antigen processing and presentation.

              In order to investigate how peptides associate with class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) glycoproteins intracellularly, we generated cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) specific for a readily available soluble protein in association with class I. C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice immunized against a syngeneic tumor cell transfected with chicken ovalbumin (OVA) cDNA gave rise to H-2Kb-restricted CTL specific for the OVA258-276 peptide. This synthetic peptide and CNBr fragments of OVA (242-285 and 242-273) were able to target H-2b cells for lysis by the CTL in a 3 hr assay. Cells incubated with native OVA for up to 24 hr did not become sensitized for recognition and lysis. However, when OVA was introduced directly into the cytoplasm of cells by the osmotic lysis of pinosomes, the Kb restricted determinant formed readily.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Exp Med
                The Journal of Experimental Medicine
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0022-1007
                1540-9538
                5 January 1998
                : 187
                : 1
                : 49-57
                Affiliations
                From the Departments of Ophthalmology, Pathology, and the Winship Cancer Center, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30322
                Author notes

                Address correspondence to Judith A. Kapp, Jules and Doris Stein RPB Professor of Ophthalmology, Emory University School of Medicine, Bldg. B, Rm. 2623, 1365 Clifton Rd., NE, Atlanta, GA 30322. Phone: 404-778-4754; Fax: 404-778-2109; E-mail: jkapp@ 123456emory.edu

                Article
                2199192
                9419210
                a63dc730-b518-4b9b-9d2a-70a744a94701
                Copyright @ 1998
                History
                : 7 May 1997
                : 11 September 1997
                Categories
                Article

                Medicine
                Medicine

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