Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/239520
Title: Large-Scale HLA Tetramer Tracking of T Cells during Dengue Infection Reveals Broad Acute Activation and Differentiation into Two Memory Cell Fates
Authors: Chng, Melissa Hui Yen 
Lim, Mei Qiu 
Rouers, Angeline
Becht, Etienne
Lee, Bernett
MacAry, Paul A 
Lye, David Chien 
Leo, Yee Sin 
Chen, Jinmiao 
Fink, Katja
Rivino, Laura 
Newell, Evan W 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Immunology
HEMORRHAGIC-FEVER
IMMUNE-RESPONSES
VIRUS-INFECTION
EXPRESSION
EFFECTOR
CD4(+)
LYMPHOCYTES
BLOOD
CHILDREN
RECEPTOR
Issue Date: 17-Dec-2019
Publisher: CELL PRESS
Citation: Chng, Melissa Hui Yen, Lim, Mei Qiu, Rouers, Angeline, Becht, Etienne, Lee, Bernett, MacAry, Paul A, Lye, David Chien, Leo, Yee Sin, Chen, Jinmiao, Fink, Katja, Rivino, Laura, Newell, Evan W (2019-12-17). Large-Scale HLA Tetramer Tracking of T Cells during Dengue Infection Reveals Broad Acute Activation and Differentiation into Two Memory Cell Fates. IMMUNITY 51 (6) : 1119-1135. ScholarBank@NUS Repository.
Abstract: T cells play important multifaceted roles during dengue infection, and understanding their responses is important for defining correlates of protective immunity and identifying effective vaccine antigens. Using mass cytometry and a highly multiplexed peptide-HLA (human leukocyte antigen) tetramer staining strategy, we probed T cells from dengue patients—a total of 430 dengue and control candidate epitopes—together with key markers of activation, trafficking, and differentiation. During acute disease, dengue-specific CD8+ T cells expressed a distinct profile of activation and trafficking receptors that distinguished them from non-dengue-specific T cells. During convalescence, dengue-specific T cells differentiated into two major cell fates, CD57+ CD127−-resembling terminally differentiated senescent memory cells and CD127+ CD57−-resembling proliferation-capable memory cells. Validation in an independent cohort showed that these subsets remained at elevated frequencies up to one year after infection. These analyses aid our understanding of the generation of T cell memory in dengue infection or vaccination.
Source Title: IMMUNITY
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/239520
ISSN: 1074-7613
1097-4180
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