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Cross-presenting Langerhans cells are required for the early reactivation of resident CD8 + memory T cells in the epidermis.

Nadine KamenjarinKatrin HodappFelix MelchiorGregory HarmsAnn-Kathrin HartmannJoschka BartneckSabine MuthVerena K RakerChristian BeckerAnna BrandBjörn E ClausenMarkus Philipp RadsakHansjörg SchildHans Christian Probst
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Tissue-resident memory CD8 + T cells (T RM ) reside at sites of previous infection, providing protection against reinfection with the same pathogen. In the skin, T RM patrol the epidermis, where keratinocytes are the entry site for many viral infections. Epidermal T RM react rapidly to cognate antigen encounter with the secretion of cytokines and differentiation into cytotoxic effector cells, constituting a first line of defense against skin reinfection. Despite the important protective role of skin T RM , it has remained unclear, whether their reactivation requires a professional antigen-presenting cell (APC). We show here, using a model system that allows antigen targeting selectively to keratinocytes in a defined area of the skin, that limited antigen expression by keratinocytes results in rapid, antigen-specific reactivation of skin T RM . Our data identify epidermal Langerhans cells that cross-present keratinocyte-derived antigens, as the professional APC indispensable for the early reactivation of T RM in the epidermal layer of the skin.
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