Journal article
MAIT cells upregulate α4β7 in response to acute simian immunodeficiency Virus/Simian HIV infection but are resistant to peripheral depletion in pigtail macaques
JA Juno, KM Wragg, T Amarasena, BS Meehan, JYW Mak, L Liu, DP Fairlie, J McCluskey, SBG Eckle, SJ Kent
Journal of Immunology | AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS | Published : 2019
Abstract
Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are nonconventional T lymphocytes that recognize bacterial metabolites presented by MR1. Whereas gut bacterial translocation and the loss/dysfunction of peripheral MAIT cells in HIV infection is well described, MAIT cells in nonhuman primate models are poorly characterized.We generated a pigtail macaque (PTM)-specific MR1 tetramer and characterized MAIT cells in serial samples from naive and SIV- or simian HIV-infected PTM. Although PTM MAIT cells generally resemble the phenotype and transcriptional profile of human MAIT cells, they exhibited uniquely low expression of the gut-homing marker α4β7 and were not enriched at the gut mucosa. PTM MAIT cel..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Program Grant 1052979. J.A.J. and S.J.K. are funded by NHMRC fellowships. S.B.G.E. is funded by an Australian Research Council fellowship.