CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development

During an immune response, naïve CD4+ T cells proliferate and generate a range of effector, memory, and regulatory T cell subsets, but how these processes are co-ordinated remains unclear. A traditional model suggests that memory cells use mitochondrial respiration and are survivors from a pool of p...

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Main Authors: Stephen P. Cobbold, Elizabeth Adams, Duncan Howie, Herman Waldmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Immunology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2018.01381/full
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spelling doaj-3902aafa76bd4baba1f753d592fae2762020-11-24T21:39:01ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242018-06-01910.3389/fimmu.2018.01381384310CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium DevelopmentStephen P. CobboldElizabeth AdamsDuncan HowieHerman WaldmannDuring an immune response, naïve CD4+ T cells proliferate and generate a range of effector, memory, and regulatory T cell subsets, but how these processes are co-ordinated remains unclear. A traditional model suggests that memory cells use mitochondrial respiration and are survivors from a pool of previously proliferating and glycolytic, but short-lived effector cells. A more recent model proposes a binary commitment to either a memory or effector cell lineage during a first, asymmetric cell division, with each lineage able to undergo subsequent proliferation and differentiation. We used improved fixation and staining methods with imaging flow cytometry in an optimized in vitro system that indicates a third model. We found that cell fates result from stochastic decisions that depend on GITR co-stimulation and which take place before any cell division. Effector cell commitment is associated with mTORC2 signaling leading to uropodium development, while developing memory cells lose mitochondria, have a nuclear localization of NFκB and depend on TGFβ for their survival. Induced, T helper subsets and foxp3+ regulatory T cells were found in both the effector and memory cell lineages. This in vitro model of T cell differentiation is well suited to testing how manipulation of cytokine, nutrient, and other components of the microenvironment might be exploited for therapeutic purposes.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2018.01381/fullT cell differentiationcell fateasymmetric cell divisionimaging flow cytometryGITRmTOR signaling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen P. Cobbold
Elizabeth Adams
Duncan Howie
Herman Waldmann
spellingShingle Stephen P. Cobbold
Elizabeth Adams
Duncan Howie
Herman Waldmann
CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
Frontiers in Immunology
T cell differentiation
cell fate
asymmetric cell division
imaging flow cytometry
GITR
mTOR signaling
author_facet Stephen P. Cobbold
Elizabeth Adams
Duncan Howie
Herman Waldmann
author_sort Stephen P. Cobbold
title CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
title_short CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
title_full CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
title_fullStr CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
title_full_unstemmed CD4+ T Cell Fate Decisions Are Stochastic, Precede Cell Division, Depend on GITR Co-Stimulation, and Are Associated With Uropodium Development
title_sort cd4+ t cell fate decisions are stochastic, precede cell division, depend on gitr co-stimulation, and are associated with uropodium development
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Immunology
issn 1664-3224
publishDate 2018-06-01
description During an immune response, naïve CD4+ T cells proliferate and generate a range of effector, memory, and regulatory T cell subsets, but how these processes are co-ordinated remains unclear. A traditional model suggests that memory cells use mitochondrial respiration and are survivors from a pool of previously proliferating and glycolytic, but short-lived effector cells. A more recent model proposes a binary commitment to either a memory or effector cell lineage during a first, asymmetric cell division, with each lineage able to undergo subsequent proliferation and differentiation. We used improved fixation and staining methods with imaging flow cytometry in an optimized in vitro system that indicates a third model. We found that cell fates result from stochastic decisions that depend on GITR co-stimulation and which take place before any cell division. Effector cell commitment is associated with mTORC2 signaling leading to uropodium development, while developing memory cells lose mitochondria, have a nuclear localization of NFκB and depend on TGFβ for their survival. Induced, T helper subsets and foxp3+ regulatory T cells were found in both the effector and memory cell lineages. This in vitro model of T cell differentiation is well suited to testing how manipulation of cytokine, nutrient, and other components of the microenvironment might be exploited for therapeutic purposes.
topic T cell differentiation
cell fate
asymmetric cell division
imaging flow cytometry
GITR
mTOR signaling
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2018.01381/full
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