LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Early programming and late‐acting checkpoints governing the development of CD4 T‐cell memory

Photo by afgprogrammer from unsplash

CD4 T cells contribute to protection against pathogens through numerous mechanisms. Incorporating the goal of memory CD4 T‐cell generation into vaccine strategies therefore offers a powerful approach to improve their… Click to show full abstract

CD4 T cells contribute to protection against pathogens through numerous mechanisms. Incorporating the goal of memory CD4 T‐cell generation into vaccine strategies therefore offers a powerful approach to improve their efficacy, especially in situations where humoral responses alone cannot confer long‐term immunity. These threats include viruses such as influenza that mutate coat proteins to avoid neutralizing antibodies, but that are targeted by T cells that recognize more conserved protein epitopes shared by different strains. A major barrier in the design of such vaccines is that the mechanisms controlling the efficiency with which memory cells form remain incompletely understood. Here, we discuss recent insights into fate decisions controlling memory generation. We focus on the importance of three general cues: interleukin‐2, antigen and co‐stimulatory interactions. It is increasingly clear that these signals have a powerful influence on the capacity of CD4 T cells to form memory during two distinct phases of the immune response. First, through ‘programming’ that occurs during initial priming, and second, through ‘checkpoints’ that operate later during the effector stage. These findings indicate that novel vaccine strategies must seek to optimize cognate interactions, during which interleukin‐2‐, antigen‐ and co‐stimulation‐dependent signals are tightly linked, well beyond initial antigen encounter to induce robust memory CD4 T cells.

Keywords: cd4 cells; cd4 cell; early programming; cd4; memory

Journal Title: Immunology
Year Published: 2018

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.