Allergen-specific naïve and memory CD4+ T cells exhibit functional and phenotypic differences between individuals with or without allergy

2010 
Although allergen-specific CD4+ T cells are detectable in the peripheral blood of both individuals with or without allergy, their frequencies and phenotypes within the memory as well as naive repertoires are incompletely known. Here, we analyzed the DRB1*0401-restricted responses of peripheral blood-derived memory (CD4+CD45RO+) and naive (CD4+CD45RA+) T cells from subjects with or without allergy against the immunodominant epitope of the major cow dander allergen Bos d 2 by HLA class II tetramers in vitro. The frequency of Bos d 2127–142-specific memory T cells in the peripheral blood-derived cultures appeared to be higher in subjects with allergy than those without, whereas naive Bos d 2127–142-specific T cells were detectable in the cultures of both groups at nearly the same frequency. Surprisingly, the TCR avidity of Bos d 2127–142-specific T cells of naive origin, as assessed by the intensity of HLA class II tetramer staining, was found to be higher in individuals with allergy. Upon restimulation, long-term Bos d 2127–142-specific T-cell lines generated from both memory and naive T-cell pools from individuals with allergy proliferated more strongly, produced more IL-4 and IL-10, and expressed higher levels of CD25 but lower levels of CXCR3 than the T-cell lines from individuals without allergy, demonstrating differences also at the functional level. Collectively, our current results suggest that not only the memory but also the naive allergen-specific T-cell repertoires differ between individuals with or without allergy.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    32
    References
    26
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []