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Perforin and IL-2 Upregulation
Define Qualitative Differences Among Highly Functional
Virus-Specific Human CD8+ T cells
George Makedonas, Natalie Hutnick, Danielle Haney, Alexandra
C. Amick, Jay Gardner, Gabriela Cosma, Adam R. Hersperger,
Douglas Dolfi, E. John Wherry, Guido Ferrar, Michael
R. Betts. PLoS Pathogens.
2010
The prevailing paradigm of T lymphocyte control of viral replication
is that the protective capacity of virus-specific CD8+ T cells
is directly proportional to the number of functions they can
perform, with IL-2 production capacity considered critical.
Having recently defined rapid perforin upregulation as a novel
effector function of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells, here we
sought to determine whether new perforin production is a component
of polyfunctional CD8+ T cell responses that contributes to
the control of several human viral infections: cytomegalovirus
(CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), influenza (flu), and adenovirus
(Ad). We stimulated normal human donor PBMC with synthetic
peptides whose amino acid sequences correspond to defined CTL
epitopes in the aforementioned viruses, and then used polychromatic
flow cytometry to measure the functional capacity and the phenotype
of the responding CD8+ T cells. While EBV and flu-specific
CD8+ T cells rarely upregulate perforin, CMV-specific cells
often do and Ad stimulates an exceptionally strong perforin
response. The differential propensity of CD8+ T cells to produce
either IL-2 or perforin is in part related to levels of CD28
and the transcription factor T-bet, as CD8+ T cells that rapidly
upregulate perforin harbor high levels of T-bet and those producing
IL-2 express high amounts of CD28. Thus, ÔpolyfunctionalÕ profiling
of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells must not be limited to simply
the number of functions the cell can perform, or one particular
memory phenotype, but should actually define which combinations
of memory markers and functions are relevant in each pathogenic
context.
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