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DOI: 10.1038/nm.2446
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

A human memory T cell subset with stem cell–like properties

Luca Gattinoni,Enrico Lugli,Yun Ji,Zoltán Pós,Chrystal M. Paulos,Máire F. Quigley,Jorge Reis Almeida,Emma Gostick,Zhiya Yu,Carmine Carpenito,Ena Wang,Daniel C. Douek,David A. Price,Carl H. June,Francesco M. Marincola,Mario Roederer,Nicholas P. Restifo

CD28
Memory T cell
Biology
2011
Whether there exists a human memory T cell population with stem cell–like properties of self-renewal and multipotency is under active investigation. Here Gattinoni et al. characterize a subset of human T cells that phenotypically resemble naive T cells yet have properties associated with memory T cells. These T cells show enhanced ability to self renew and to give rise to differentiated memory cell subsets, suggesting a stem cell–like functionality. Immunological memory is thought to depend on a stem cell–like, self-renewing population of lymphocytes capable of differentiating into effector cells in response to antigen re-exposure. Here we describe a long-lived human memory T cell population that has an enhanced capacity for self-renewal and a multipotent ability to derive central memory, effector memory and effector T cells. These cells, specific to multiple viral and self-tumor antigens, were found within a CD45RO−, CCR7+, CD45RA+, CD62L+, CD27+, CD28+ and IL-7Rα+ T cell compartment characteristic of naive T cells. However, they expressed large amounts of CD95, IL-2Rβ, CXCR3, and LFA-1, and showed numerous functional attributes distinctive of memory cells. Compared with known memory populations, these lymphocytes had increased proliferative capacity and more efficiently reconstituted immunodeficient hosts, and they mediated superior antitumor responses in a humanized mouse model. The identification of a human stem cell–like memory T cell population is of direct relevance to the design of vaccines and T cell therapies.
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    A human memory T cell subset with stem cell–like properties” is a paper by Luca Gattinoni Enrico Lugli Yun Ji Zoltán Pós Chrystal M. Paulos Máire F. Quigley Jorge Reis Almeida Emma Gostick Zhiya Yu Carmine Carpenito Ena Wang Daniel C. Douek David A. Price Carl H. June Francesco M. Marincola Mario Roederer Nicholas P. Restifo published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.