CD27 mediates interleukin-2-independent clonal expansion of the CD8+ T cell without effector differentiation

JM Carr, MJ Carrasco… - Proceedings of the …, 2006 - National Acad Sciences
JM Carr, MJ Carrasco, JED Thaventhiran, PJ Bambrough, M Kraman, AD Edwards
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006National Acad Sciences
The clonal expansion of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in response to microbial infections is
essential for adaptive immunity. Although IL-2 has been considered to be primarily
responsible for this process, quantitatively normal expansion occurs in the absence of IL-2
receptor signaling. Here, we show that ligating CD27 on CD8+ T cells that have been
stimulated through the T cell receptor causes their expansion in the absence of IL-2 by
mediating two distinct cellular processes: enhancing cell cycling and promoting cell survival …
The clonal expansion of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in response to microbial infections is essential for adaptive immunity. Although IL-2 has been considered to be primarily responsible for this process, quantitatively normal expansion occurs in the absence of IL-2 receptor signaling. Here, we show that ligating CD27 on CD8+ T cells that have been stimulated through the T cell receptor causes their expansion in the absence of IL-2 by mediating two distinct cellular processes: enhancing cell cycling and promoting cell survival by maintaining the expression of IL-7 receptor α. This pathway for clonal expansion of the CD8+ T cell is not associated with the development of a capacity either for production of IFN-γ or for cytotoxic T lymphocyte function and, therefore, is uncoupled from differentiation. Furthermore, ligating CD27 increases the threshold concentration at which IL-2 induces IFN-γ-producing capability by the CD8+ T cell, suggesting that CD27 signaling may suppress effector differentiation. Finally, CD8+ T cells that have been stimulated by the TCR/CD27 pathway maintain their capacity for subsequent expansion and effector differentiation in response to a viral challenge in vivo. Thus, the TCR/CD27 pathway enables the CD8+ T cell to replicate by a process of self-renewal, which may contribute to the continuous generation of new effector CD8+ T cells in persistent viral infections.
National Acad Sciences