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A Subset of Mycobacteria-Specific CD4+ IFN-γ+ T Cell Expressing Naive Phenotype Confers Protection against Tuberculosis Infection in the Lung.

Jinyun YuanJanice TenantThomas PacatteChristopher EickhoffAzra BlazevicDaniel F HoftSoumya Chatterjee
Published in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2019)
Failure of the most recent tuberculosis (TB) vaccine trial to boost bacillus Calmette-Guérin-mediated anti-TB immunity despite the induction of Th1-specific central memory cell and effector memory cell responses highlights the importance of identifying optimal T cell targets for protective vaccines. In this study, we describe a novel, Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific IFN-γ+CD4+ T cell population expressing surface markers characteristic of naive-like memory T cells (TNLM), which were induced in both human (CD45RA+CCR7+CD27+CD95-) and murine (CD62L+CD44-Sca-1+CD122-) systems in response to mycobacteria. In bacillus Calmette-Guérin-vaccinated subjects and those with latent TB infection, TNLM were marked by the production of IFN-γ but not TNF-α and identified by the absence of CD95 expression and increased surface expression CCR7, CD27, the activation markers T-bet, CD69, and the survival marker CD74. Increased tetramer-positive TNLM frequencies were noted in the lung and spleen of ESAT-61-20-specific TCR transgenic mice at 2 wk postinfection with M. tuberculosis and progressively decreased at later time points, a pattern not seen with TNF-α+CD4+ T cells expressing naive cell surface markers. Importantly, adoptive transfer of highly purified TNLM alone, from vaccinated ESAT-61-20-specific TCR transgenic mice, conferred equivalent protection against M. tuberculosis infection in the lungs of Rag-/- mice when compared with total memory populations (central and effector memory cells). Thus, TNLM may represent a memory T cell population that, if optimally targeted, may significantly improve future TB vaccine responses.
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