Rescue of CD8+ T cell vaccine memory following sublethal ? irradiation.
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ABSTRACT: Sublethal ? irradiation eliminates CD8+ T cell mediated memory responses. In this work, we explored how these memory responses could be rescued in the aftermath of such exposure. We utilized two models of CD8+ T cell mediated immunity: a mouse model of Listeria monocytogenes (LM) infection in which CD8+ T cells specific for LM expressed antigens (Listeriolysin O, LLO) can be tracked, and a murine skin graft model in which CD8+ T cells mediate rejection across a MHC class I (D(d)) disparity. In the LM immunized mice, LL0 specific CD8+ T memory cells were lost on irradiation, preserved with rapid revaccination with an attenuated strain 1-3 days post-irradiation (PI), and these mice survived a subsequent wild type LM challenge. A genetic "signature of rescue" identified a group of immune-associated mRNA maintained or upregulated following irradiation and rescue. A number of these factors, including IL-36?, dectin-2 (Clec4n), and mir101c are upregulated rapidly after exposure of mice to sublethal ? radiation alone and are sustained by early, but not later rescue. Such factors will be evaluated as potential therapeutics to replace individual vaccines for global rescue of CD8+ T memory cell responses following sublethal ? irradiation. The skin allograft model mirrored that of the LM model in that the accelerated D(d) skin allograft rejection response was lost in mice exposed to sublethal ? radiation, but infusion of allogeneic D(d) expressing bone marrow cells 1-4 days PI preserved the CD8+ T memory mediated accelerated rejection response, further suggesting that innate immune responses may not always be essential to rescue of CD8+ memory T cells following ? irradiation.
SUBMITTER: McFarland HI
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4524295 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Jul
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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