Early specification of CD8+ T lymphocyte fates during adaptive immunity revealed by single-cell gene expression analyses
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ABSTRACT: T lymphocytes responding to microbial infection give rise to effector cells that mediate acute host defense and memory cells that provide long-lived immunity, but the fundamental question of when and how these cells arise remains unresolved. Here we combine single-cell gene expression analyses with machine-learning approaches to trace the transcriptional roadmap of individual CD8+ T lymphocytes throughout the course of an immune response in vivo. Gene expression signatures predictive of eventual fates could be discerned as early as the first T lymphocyte division and may be influenced by asymmetric partitioning of the interleukin-2 receptor during mitosis. These findings underscore the importance of single-cell analyses in understanding fate determination and provide new insights into the specification of divergent lymphocyte fates early during an immune response to microbial infection.
ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus
PROVIDER: GSE54321 | GEO | 2014/03/02
SECONDARY ACCESSION(S): PRJNA236149
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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