4.7 Article

CD4+ T cell effector commitment coupled to self-renewal by asymmetric cell divisions

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 214, Issue 1, Pages 39-47

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20161046

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI061699, AI113365, AI076458, AI112579, AI115149, AI119160, AI121080]
  2. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Review Award [I01 BX002903]

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Upon infection, an activated CD4(+) T cell produces terminally differentiated effector cells and renews itself for continued defense. In this study, we show that differentiation and self-renewal arise as opposing outcomes of sibling CD4(+) T cells. After influenza challenge, antigen-specific cells underwent several divisions in draining lymph nodes ( LN; DLNs) while maintaining expression of TCF1. After four or five divisions, some cells silenced, whereas some cells maintained TCF1 expression. TCF1silenced cells were T helper 1-like effectors and concentrated in the lungs. Cells from earliest divisions were memory-like and concentrated in nondraining LN. TCF1-expressing cells from later divisions in the DLN could self-renew, clonally yielding a TCF1-silenced daughter cell as well as a sibling cell maintaining TCF1 expression. Some TCF1-expressing cells in DLNs acquired an alternative, follicular helper-like fate. Modeled differentiation experiments in vitro suggested that unequal PI3K/mechanistic target of rapamycin signaling drives intraclonal cell fate heterogeneity. Asymmetric division enables self-renewal to be coupled to production of differentiated CD4(+) effector T cells during clonal selection.

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