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Lymphatic endothelial cells prime naïve CD8+ T cells into memory cells under steady-state conditions.

Efthymia VokaliShann S YuSachiko HirosueMarcela Rinçon-RestrepoFernanda V DuraesStefanie SchererPatricia Corthésy-HenrioudWitold W KilarskiAnna MondinoDietmar ZehnStéphanie HuguesMelody A Swartz
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) chemoattract naïve T cells and promote their survival in the lymph nodes, and can cross-present antigens to naïve CD8+ T cells to drive their proliferation despite lacking key costimulatory molecules. However, the functional consequence of LEC priming of CD8+ T cells is unknown. Here, we show that while many proliferating LEC-educated T cells enter early apoptosis, the remainders comprise a long-lived memory subset, with transcriptional, metabolic, and phenotypic features of central memory and stem cell-like memory T cells. In vivo, these memory cells preferentially home to lymph nodes and display rapid proliferation and effector differentiation following memory recall, and can protect mice against a subsequent bacterial infection. These findings introduce a new immunomodulatory role for LECs in directly generating a memory-like subset of quiescent yet antigen-experienced CD8+ T cells that are long-lived and can rapidly differentiate into effector cells upon inflammatory antigenic challenge.
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