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TCR-MHC Interaction Strength Defines Trafficking and Resident Memory Status of CD8 T cells in the Brain

Anna Sanecka, Nagisa Yoshida, Elizabeth Motunrayo Kolawole, Harshil Patel, View ORCID ProfileBrian D. Evavold, View ORCID ProfileEva-Maria Frickel
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/263152
Anna Sanecka
1, London, UK
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Nagisa Yoshida
1, London, UK
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Elizabeth Motunrayo Kolawole
2Division of Microbiology and Immunology, Department of Pathology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
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Harshil Patel
3Bioinformatics and Biostatistics, The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK
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Brian D. Evavold
3Bioinformatics and Biostatistics, The Francis Crick Institute, London, UK
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Eva-Maria Frickel
1, London, UK
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  • ORCID record for Eva-Maria Frickel
  • For correspondence: eva.frickel@crick.ac.uk
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Abstract

T cell receptor-Major histocompatibility complex (TCR-MHC) affinities span a wide range in a polyclonal T cell response, yet it is undefined how affinity shapes long-term properties of CD8 T cells during chronic infection with persistent antigen. Here, we investigate how the affinity of the TCR-MHC interaction shapes the phenotype of memory CD8 T cells in the chronically Toxoplasma gondii-infected brain. We employed CD8 T cells from three lines of transnuclear (TN) mice that harbour in their endogenous loci different T cell receptors specific for the same Toxoplasma antigenic epitope ROP7. The three TN CD8 T cell clones span a wide range of affinities to MHCI-ROP7. These three CD8 T cell clones have a distinct and fixed hierarchy in terms of effector function in response to the antigen measured as proliferation capacity, trafficking, T cell maintenance and memory formation. In particular, the T cell clone of lowest affinity does not home to the brain. The two higher affinity T cell clones show differences in establishing resident memory populations (CD103+) in the brain with the higher affinity clone persisting longer in the host during chronic infection. Transcriptional profiling of naïve and activated ROP7-specific CD8 T cells revealed that Klf2 encoding a transcription factor that is known to be a negative marker for T cell trafficking is upregulated in the activated lowest affinity ROP7 clone. Our data thus suggest that TCR-MHC affinity dictates memory CD8 T cell fate at the site of infection.

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Posted February 09, 2018.
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TCR-MHC Interaction Strength Defines Trafficking and Resident Memory Status of CD8 T cells in the Brain
Anna Sanecka, Nagisa Yoshida, Elizabeth Motunrayo Kolawole, Harshil Patel, Brian D. Evavold, Eva-Maria Frickel
bioRxiv 263152; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/263152
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TCR-MHC Interaction Strength Defines Trafficking and Resident Memory Status of CD8 T cells in the Brain
Anna Sanecka, Nagisa Yoshida, Elizabeth Motunrayo Kolawole, Harshil Patel, Brian D. Evavold, Eva-Maria Frickel
bioRxiv 263152; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/263152

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