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Antifungal Tc17 cells are durable and stable,persisting as long-lasting vaccine memory without plasticity towards IFNγ cells
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نویسنده
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nanjappa s.g. ,mcdermott a.j. ,fites j.s. ,galles k. ,wüthrich m. ,deepe g.s. ,klein b.s.
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منبع
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plos pathogens - 2017 - دوره : 13 - شماره : 5
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چکیده
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Our understanding of persistence and plasticity of il-17a+memory t cells is clouded by conflicting results in models analyzing t helper 17 cells. we studied memory il-17a+cd8+t-cell (tc17) homeostasis,persistence and plasticity during fungal vaccine immunity. we report that vaccine-induced memory tc17 cells persist with high fidelity to the type 17 phenotype. tc17 cells persisted durably for a year as functional il-17a+memory cells without converting to ifnγ+(tc1) cells,although they produced multiple type i cytokines in the absence of residual vaccine antigen. memory tc17 cells were canonical cd8+t cells with phenotypic features distinct from tc1 cells,and were ror(γ)thi,tcf-1hi,t-betloand eomeslo. in investigating the bases of tc17 persistence,we observed that memory tc17 cells had much higher levels of basal homeostatic proliferation than did tc1 cells. conversely,memory tc17 cells displayed lower levels of anti-apoptotic molecules bcl-2 and bcl-xl than tc1 cells,yet were resistant to apoptosis. tc1 cells required bcl-2 for their survival,but bcl-2 was dispensable for the maintenance of tc17 cells. tc17 and tc1 cells displayed different requirements for hif-1α during effector differentiation and sustenance and memory persistence. thus,antifungal vaccination induces durable and stable memory tc17 cells with distinct requirements for long-term persistence that distinguish them from memory tc1 cells. © 2017 nanjappa et al.
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آدرس
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department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States, department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States, department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States, department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States, department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States, jr.,department of internal medicine,division of infectious diseases,university of cincinnati,college of medicine,cincinnati,oh, United States, department of pediatrics,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi,united states,department of internal medicine,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi,united states,department of medical microbiology and immunology,university of wisconsin school of medicine and public health,madison,wi, United States
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Authors
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