scholarly journals Resident Memory T Cells and Their Effect on Cancer

Vaccines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 562
Author(s):  
Daniel J. Craig ◽  
Justin F. Creeden ◽  
Katelyn R. Einloth ◽  
Cassidy E. Gillman ◽  
Laura Stanbery ◽  
...  

Resident memory T (TRM) cells are a unique subset of CD8+ T cells that are present within certain tissues and do not recirculate through the blood. Long term memory establishment and maintenance are dependent on tissue population of memory T cells. They are characterized by dual CD69/CD103 positivity, and play a role in both response to viral infection and local cancer immunosurveillance. Human TRM cells demonstrate the increased expression of adhesion molecules to facilitate tissue retention, have reduced proliferation and produce both regulatory and immune responsive cytokines. TRM cell phenotype is often characterized by a distinct expression profile driven by Runx3, Blimp1, and Hobit transcription factors. The accumulation of TRM cells in tumors is associated with increased survival and response to immunotherapies, including anti-PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4. In this review, we explore potential mechanisms of TRM cell transformation and maintenance, as well as potential applications for the use of TRM cells in both the development of supportive therapies and establishing more accurate prognoses.

Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
Jiangyuan Han ◽  
Yanlin Ma ◽  
Lan Ma ◽  
Daquan Tan ◽  
Hongxia Niu ◽  
...  

Long-lived memory cell formation and maintenance are usually regulated by cytokines and transcriptional factors. Adjuvant effects of IL-7 have been studied in the vaccines of influenza and other pathogens. However, few studies investigated the adjuvant effects of cytokines and transcriptional factors in prolonging the immune memory induced by a tuberculosis (TB) subunit vaccine. To address this research gap, mice were treated with the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) subunit vaccine Mtb10.4-HspX (MH) plus ESAT6-Ag85B-MPT64<190–198>-Mtb8.4-Rv2626c (LT70), together with adeno-associated virus-mediated IL-7 or lentivirus-mediated transcriptional factor Id3, Bcl6, Bach2, and Blimp1 at 0, 2, and 4 weeks, respectively. Immune responses induced by the vaccine were examined at 25 weeks after last immunization. The results showed that adeno-associated virus-mediated IL-7 allowed the TB subunit vaccine to induce the formation of long-lived memory T cells. Meanwhile, IL-7 increased the expression of Id3, Bcl6, and bach2—the three key transcription factors for the generation of long-lived memory T cells. The adjuvant effects of transcriptional factors, together with TB fusion protein MH/LT70 vaccination, showed that both Bcl6 and Id3 increased the production of antigen-specific antibodies and long-lived memory T cells, characterized by high proliferative potential of antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and IFN-γ secretion in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, respectively, after re-exposure to the same antigen. Overall, our study suggests that IL-7 and transcriptional factors Id3 and Bcl6 help the TB subunit vaccine to induce long-term immune memory, which contributes to providing immune protection against M. tuberculosis infection.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin G. Wiggins ◽  
Laura J. Pallett ◽  
Xiaoyan Li ◽  
Scott P. Davies ◽  
Oliver E. Amin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBackground & AimsTissue-resident memory T cells (TRM) are important immune sentinels that provide efficient in situ immunity. Liver-resident CD8+ TRM have been previously described, and contribute to viral control in persistent hepatotropic infections. However, little is known regarding liver CD4+ TRM cells. Here we profiled resident and non-resident intrahepatic CD4+ T cell subsets, assessing their phenotype, function, differential generation requirements and roles in hepatotropic infection.MethodsLiver tissue was obtained from 173 subjects with (n=109) or without (n=64) hepatic pathology. Multiparametric flow cytometry and immunofluorescence imaging examined T cell phenotype, functionality and location. Liver T cell function was determined after stimulation with anti-CD3/CD28 and PMA/Ionomycin. Co-cultures of blood-derived lymphocytes with hepatocyte cell lines, primary biliary epithelial cells, and precision-cut autologous liver slices were used to investigate the acquisition of liver-resident phenotypes.ResultsCD69 expression delineated two distinct subsets in the human liver. CD69HI cells were identified as CD4+ TRM due to exclusion from the circulation, a residency-associated phenotype (CXCR6+CD49a+S1PR1-PD-1+), restriction to specific liver niches, and ability to produce robust type-1 multifunctional cytokine responses. Conversely, CD69INT were an activated T cell population also found in the peripheral circulation, with a distinct homing profile (CX3CR1+CXCR3+CXCR1+), and a bias towards IL-4 production. Frequencies of CD69INT cells correlated with the degree of fibrosis in chronic hepatitis B virus infection. Interaction with hepatic epithelia was sufficient to generate CD69INT cells, while additional signals from the liver microenvironment were required to generate liver-resident CD69HI cells.ConclusionsIntermediate and high CD69 expression demarcates two discrete intrahepatic CD4+ T cell subsets with distinct developmental and functional profiles.Graphical AbstractHighlightsCD69HI (CXCR6+CD49a+S1PR1-PD-1+) are the CD4+ TRM of the human liverHepatic CD69INTCD4+ T-cells are distinct, activated, and recirculation-competentStimulation evokes respective IFN-γ and IL-4 responses in CD69HI and CD69INT cellsCD69INT cell frequencies correlate with worsening fibrosis in chronic HBV patientsLiver slice cultures allow differentiation of CD69INT and CD69HI cells from bloodLay summaryTissue-resident memory T cells (TRM) orchestrate regional immune responses, but much of the biology of liver-resident CD4+ TRM remains unknown. We found high expression of cell-surface protein CD69 defined hepatic CD4+ TRM, while simultaneously uncovering a distinct novel recirculatory CD69INT CD4+ T cell subset. Both subsets displayed unique immune receptor profiles, were functionally skewed towards type-1 and type-2 responses respectively, and had distinct generation requirements, highlighting the potential for differential roles in the immunopathology of chronic liver diseases.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guo Li ◽  
Liwen Wang ◽  
Chaoyu Ma ◽  
Wei Liao ◽  
Yong Liu ◽  
...  

Stem-like CD8+ T cells represent the key subset responding to multiple tumor immunotherapies, including tumor vaccination. However, the signals that control the differentiation of stem-like T cells are not entirely known. Most previous investigations on stem-like T cells are focused on tumor infiltrating T cells (TIL). The behavior of stem-like T cells in other tissues remains to be elucidated. Tissue-resident memory T cells (TRM) are often defined as a non-circulating T cell population residing in non-lymphoid tissues. TILs carrying TRM features are associated with better tumor control. Here, we found that stem-like CD8+ T cells differentiated into TRMs in a TGF-β and tumor antigen dependent manner almost exclusively in tumor draining lymph node (TDLN). TDLN-resident stem-like T cells were negatively associated with the response to tumor vaccine. In other words, after tumor vaccine, TDLN stem-like T cells transiently lost TRM features, differentiated into migratory effectors and exerted tumor control.


2019 ◽  
Vol 216 (12) ◽  
pp. 2748-2762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander N. Wein ◽  
Sean R. McMaster ◽  
Shiki Takamura ◽  
Paul R. Dunbar ◽  
Emily K. Cartwright ◽  
...  

Resident memory T cells (TRM cells) are an important first-line defense against respiratory pathogens, but the unique contributions of lung TRM cell populations to protective immunity and the factors that govern their localization to different compartments of the lung are not well understood. Here, we show that airway and interstitial TRM cells have distinct effector functions and that CXCR6 controls the partitioning of TRM cells within the lung by recruiting CD8 TRM cells to the airways. The absence of CXCR6 significantly decreases airway CD8 TRM cells due to altered trafficking of CXCR6−/− cells within the lung, and not decreased survival in the airways. CXCL16, the ligand for CXCR6, is localized primarily at the respiratory epithelium, and mice lacking CXCL16 also had decreased CD8 TRM cells in the airways. Finally, blocking CXCL16 inhibited the steady-state maintenance of airway TRM cells. Thus, the CXCR6/CXCL16 signaling axis controls the localization of TRM cells to different compartments of the lung and maintains airway TRM cells.


Author(s):  
Felix M. Behr ◽  
Ammarina Beumer‐Chuwonpad ◽  
Natasja A. M. Kragten ◽  
Thomas H. Wesselink ◽  
Regina Stark ◽  
...  

Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 346 (6205) ◽  
pp. 101-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Ariotti ◽  
Marc A. Hogenbirk ◽  
Feline E. Dijkgraaf ◽  
Lindy L. Visser ◽  
Mirjam E. Hoekstra ◽  
...  

After an infection, pathogen-specific tissue-resident memory T cells (TRM cells) persist in nonlymphoid tissues to provide rapid control upon reinfection, and vaccination strategies that create TRM cell pools at sites of pathogen entry are therefore attractive. However, it is not well understood how TRM cells provide such pathogen protection. Here, we demonstrate that activated TRM cells in mouse skin profoundly alter the local tissue environment by inducing a number of broadly active antiviral and antibacterial genes. This “pathogen alert” allows skin TRM cells to protect against an antigenically unrelated virus. These data describe a mechanism by which tissue-resident memory CD8+ T cells protect previously infected sites that is rapid, amplifies the activation of a small number of cells into an organ-wide response, and has the capacity to control escape variants.


2020 ◽  
Vol 217 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Michael Stolley ◽  
Timothy S. Johnston ◽  
Andrew G. Soerens ◽  
Lalit K. Beura ◽  
Pamela C. Rosato ◽  
...  

Numerous observations indicate that resident memory T cells (TRM) undergo unusually rapid attrition within the lung. Here we demonstrate that contraction of lung CD8+ T cell responses after influenza infection is contemporized with egress of CD69+/CD103+ CD8+ T cells to the draining mediastinal LN via the lymphatic vessels, which we term retrograde migration. Cells within the draining LN retained canonical markers of lung TRM, including CD103 and CD69, lacked Ly6C expression (also a feature of lung TRM), maintained granzyme B expression, and did not equilibrate among immunized parabiotic mice. Investigations of bystander infection or removal of the TCR from established memory cells revealed that the induction of the TRM phenotype was dependent on antigen recognition; however, maintenance was independent. Thus, local lung infection induces CD8+ T cells with a TRM phenotype that nevertheless undergo retrograde migration, yet remain durably committed to the residency program within the draining LN, where they provide longer-lived regional memory while chronicling previous upstream antigen experiences.


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 156-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Chen ◽  
Premlata Shankar ◽  
Christoph Lange ◽  
Hernan Valdez ◽  
Paul R. Skolnik ◽  
...  

Abstract CD8 T cells are classified as naı̈ve, effector, or memory cells on the basis of CD45RA, CD62L, and CCR7 expression. Sequential engagement of cell-surface CD62L and CCR7 receptors is required for efficient trafficking to lymphoid tissue by means of high endothelial venules. Naı̈ve CD8 T cells are CCR7+CD62L+ CD45RA+, whereas long-term memory cells are CCR7+CD62L+CD45RA−. Effector cytotoxic T cells are thought to be CCR7−CD45RA+. The distribution of CD8 subsets and cytolytic protein expression in healthy donors and donors seropositive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were compared. In HIV-infected subjects, CCR7− CD8 T cells expanded at the expense of naı̈ve and long-term memory cells. In both healthy donors and HIV-infected donors, CCR7+ CD8 T cells were uniformly negative for perforin. In all subsets, perforin and granzyme A were not coordinately expressed, with perforin expression being more tightly regulated. The properties of CD8 T cells specific for cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and HIV were studied by staining with major histocompatibility complex peptide tetramers. Antigen-specific cells for chronic infections with these viruses were uniformly CCR7− and predominantly CD62L−. In 2 HIV-seropositive donors, 3- to 4-fold fewer EBV-tetramer–positive cells were present in lymph nodes compared with blood. Antigen-specific CD8 T cells are therefore preferentially excluded from lymphoid sites, even when infection is primarily in lymphoid tissue. This may protect lymphoid tissues from immunopathological changes but compromise immune defense against viruses, such as HIV and EBV, that target lymphocytes. HIV-specific CD8 T cells do not express CD45RA, whereas EBV- and CMV-specific CD8 T cells are heterogeneous in CD45RA+expression. Lack of CD45RA expression may indicate incomplete differentiation of HIV-specific CD8 T cells to cytotoxic T cells.


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