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Chronic Parasitic Infection Maintains High Frequencies of Short-Lived Ly6C+CD4+ Effector T Cells That Are Required for Protection against Re-infection
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نویسنده
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peters n.c. ,pagán a.j. ,lawyer p.g. ,hand t.w. ,henrique roma e. ,stamper l.w. ,romano a. ,sacks d.l.
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منبع
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plos pathogens - 2014 - دوره : 10 - شماره : 12
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چکیده
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In contrast to the ability of long-lived cd8+ memory t cells to mediate protection against systemic viral infections,the relationship between cd4+ t cell memory and acquired resistance against infectious pathogens remains poorly defined. this is especially true for t helper 1 (th1) concomitant immunity,in which protection against reinfection coincides with a persisting primary infection. in these situations,pre-existing effector cd4 t cells generated by ongoing chronic infection,not memory cells,may be essential for protection against reinfection. we present a systematic study of the tissue homing properties,functionality,and life span of subsets of memory and effector cd4 t cells activated in the setting of chronic leishmania major infection in resistant c57bl/6 mice. we found that pre-existing,cd44+cd62l−t-bet+ly6c+ effector (teff) cells that are short-lived in the absence of infection and are not derived from memory cells reactivated by secondary challenge,mediate concomitant immunity. upon adoptive transfer and challenge,non-dividing ly6c+ teff cells preferentially homed to the skin,released ifn-γ,and conferred protection as compared to cd44+cd62l−ly6c− effector memory or cd44+cd62l+ly6c− central memory cells. during chronic infection,ly6c+ teff cells were maintained at high frequencies via reactivation of tcm and the teff themselves. the lack of effective vaccines for many chronic diseases may be because protection against infectious challenge requires the maintenance of pre-existing teff cells,and is therefore not amenable to conventional,memory inducing,vaccination strategies. © 2014.
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آدرس
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intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md,united states,department of microbiology immunology and infectious diseases,cumming school of medicine,department of comparative biology and experimental medicine,university of calgary,calgary,ab, Canada, department of microbiology,center for immunology,university of minnesota medical school,minneapolis,mn,united states,department of microbiology,university of washington,seattle,wa, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States, intracellular parasite biology section,laboratory of parasitic diseases,national institute of allergy and infectious diseases,national institutes of health,bethesda,md, United States
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Authors
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