Tracking antigen‐specific CD4+ T cells throughout the course of chronic Leishmania major infection in resistant mice |
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Authors: | Antonio J. Pagán Nathan C. Peters Alain Debrabant Flavia Ribeiro‐Gomes Marion Pepper Christopher L. Karp Marc K. Jenkins David L. Sacks |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Microbiology, Center for Immunology, University of Minnesota Medical School, , Minneapolis, MN, USA;2. Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, , Bethesda, MD, USA;3. Division of Emerging and Transfusion Transmitted Diseases, OBRR, CBER, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, , Bethesda, MD, USA;4. Division of Molecular Immunology, Division of Infectious Diseases, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Research Foundation and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, , Cincinnati, Ohio, USA |
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Abstract: | Primary Leishmania major infection typically produces cutaneous lesions that not only heal but also harbor persistent parasites. While the opposing roles of CD4+ T‐cell‐derived IFN‐γ and IL‐10 in promoting parasite killing and persistence have been well established, how these responses develop from naïve precursors has not been directly monitored throughout the course of infection. We used peptide:Major Histocompatibility Complex class II (pMHCII) tetramers to investigate the endogenous, parasite‐specific primary CD4+ T‐cell response to L. major in mice resistant to infection. Maximal frequencies of IFN‐γ+ CD4+ T cells were observed in the spleen and infected ears within a month after infection and were maintained into the chronic phase. In contrast, peak frequencies of IL‐10+ CD4+ T cells emerged within 2 weeks of infection, persisted into the chronic phase, and accumulated in the infected ears but not the spleen, via a process that depended on local antigen presentation. T helper type‐1 (Th1) cells, not Foxp3+ regulatory T cells, were the chief producers of IL‐10 and were not exhausted. Therefore, tracking antigen‐specific CD4+ T cells revealed that IL‐10 production by Th1 cells is not due to persistent T‐cell antigen receptor stimulation, but rather driven by early antigen encounter at the site of infection. |
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Keywords: | CD4+ T cells IFN‐γ IL‐10 Leishmania major Tetramer |
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