A schematic illustration summarizing results indicating the inverse relationship of in vitro and in vivo effector functions of adoptively transferred naive and effector T cell subsets. After primary antigen stimulation, naive CD8+ T cells proliferate and progressively differentiate into terminally differentiated effector T cells. Phenotypic and functional changes characterize the differentiation process. The gradual acquisition of complete effector functions (dashed red line) is associated with the progressive inability of T cells to cause tumor regression upon adoptive transfer (black line). Such mechanisms initially involve the downregulation of lymphoid-homing and costimulatory molecules, which results in a poor in vivo activation of T cells. Other mechanisms occur later and include the inability to produce IL-2 and access homeostatic cytokines, the imbalance of proapoptotic and anti-apoptotic signals, and the acquisition of a state of replicative senescence. +, low expression; ++, intermediate expression; +++, high expression.