Journal article
Corneal tissue-resident memory T cells form a unique immune compartment at the ocular surface
JK Loi, YO Alexandre, K Senthil, D Schienstock, S Sandford, S Devi, SN Christo, LK Mackay, HR Chinnery, PB Osborne, LE Downie, EK Sloan, SN Mueller
Cell Reports | CELL PRESS | Published : 2022
Abstract
The eye is considered immune privileged such that immune responses are dampened to protect vision. As the most anterior compartment of the eye, the cornea is exposed to pathogens and can mount immune responses that recruit effector T cells. However, presence of immune memory in the cornea is not defined. Here, we use intravital 2-photon microscopy to examine T cell responses in the cornea in mice. We show that recruitment of CD8+ T cells in response to ocular virus infection results in the formation of tissue-resident memory T (TRM) cells. Motile corneal TRM cells patrol the cornea and rapidly respond in situ to antigen rechallenge. CD103+ TRM cell generation requires antigen and transformin..
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Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (1136550 to S.N.M.). We thank Senuri Karunaratne and Xinyuan Zhang for acquiring and collating the IVCM images. We thank David Tscharke for the HSV RE strain.