IL-4-induced hysteresis in naive T cell activation
2020
Naive T cells are generally considered to be a homogeneous population, but for their unique T cell receptors (TCRs). Naive T cells are activated within a specific cytokine milieu upon interaction with antigen-presenting cells through cognate TCR::MHC-peptide interaction and co-stimulation. Here we demonstrate that naive T cells are transcriptionally heterogeneous, and that the relative proportions of transcriptionally distinct naive T cell subpopulations are modified by immune responses, such as during helminth infection. Not only are cognate naive T cells activated during an immune response, but the cytokine produced - such as IL-4 during helminth infection - changes the transcriptome of bystander naive T cells. Such changes in gene expression and population level heterogeneity in bystander naive T cells result in altered responses to a concurrent immune challenge, for instance, hypo-responsiveness to vaccination. Thus, naive T cell activation is not the result of a singular temporal event, but is characterized by hysteresis. Our studies suggest that antigen-agnostic, cytokine-dependent naive T cell conditioning and resulting hysteresis is a mechanism that integrates input signals from concurrent infections for the regulation of the overall magnitude of the immune response.
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