Journal article

Local proliferation maintains a stable pool of tissue-resident memory T cells after antiviral recall responses article

SL Park, A Zaid, JL Hor, SN Christo, JE Prier, B Davies, YO Alexandre, JL Gregory, TA Russell, T Gebhardt, FR Carbone, DC Tscharke, WR Heath, SN Mueller, LK MacKay

Nature Immunology | NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2018

Abstract

Although tissue-resident memory T cells (T RM cells) are critical in fighting infection, their fate after local pathogen re-encounter is unknown. Here we found that skin T RM cells engaged virus-infected cells, proliferated in situ in response to local antigen encounter and did not migrate out of the epidermis, where they exclusively reside. As a consequence, secondary T RM cells formed from pre-existing T RM cells, as well as from precursors recruited from the circulation. Newly recruited antigen-specific or bystander T RM cells were generated in the skin without displacement of the pre-existing T RM cell pool. Thus, pre-existing skin T RM cell populations are not displaced after subsequent..

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Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank C. Jones, G. Davey, M. Damtsis and N. Zamudio for technical assistance. S.L.P. was supported by the University of Melbourne (Elizabeth and Vernon Puzey Postgraduate Scholarship). T.G. was supported by a fellowship from the Sylvia and Charles Viertel Charitable Foundation. This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (to S.N.M. and L.K.M.) and the Australian Research Council (to S.N.M.).