Journal
NATURE
Volume 434, Issue 7029, Pages 88-93Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature03337
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The 'help' provided by CD4(+) T lymphocytes during the priming of CD8(+) T lymphocytes confers a key feature of immune memory: the capacity for autonomous secondary expansion following re-encounter with antigen(1-4). Once primed in the presence of CD4(+) T cells, 'helped' CD8(+) T cells acquire the ability to undergo a second round of clonal expansion upon restimulation in the absence of T-cell help. 'Helpless' CD8(+) T cells that are primed in the absence of CD4(+) T cells, in contrast, can mediate effector functions such as cytotoxicity and cytokine secretion upon restimulation, but do not undergo a second round of clonal expansion. These disparate responses have features of being 'programmed', that is, guided by signals that are transmitted to naive CD8(+) T cells during priming, which encode specific fates for their clonal progeny. Here we explore the instructional programme that governs the secondary response of CD8(+) T cells and find that helpless cells undergo death by activation-induced cell death upon secondary stimulation. This death is mediated by tumour-necrosis factor (TNF)- related apoptosis-inducing ligand ( TRAIL). Regulation of Trail expression can therefore account for the role of CD4(+) T cells in the generation of CD8(+) T cell memory and represents a novel mechanism for controlling adaptive immune responses.
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