Cancers (Aug 2022)

Concomitant Cytotoxic Effector Differentiation of CD4<sup>+</sup> and CD8<sup>+</sup> T Cells in Response to EBV-Infected B Cells

  • Yumi Tamura,
  • Keita Yamane,
  • Yohei Kawano,
  • Lars Bullinger,
  • Tristan Wirtz,
  • Timm Weber,
  • Sandrine Sander,
  • Shun Ohki,
  • Yasuo Kitajima,
  • Satoshi Okada,
  • Klaus Rajewsky,
  • Tomoharu Yasuda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14174118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 17
p. 4118

Abstract

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Most people infected by EBV acquire specific immunity, which then controls latent infection throughout their life. Immune surveillance of EBV-infected cells by cytotoxic CD4+ T cells has been recognized; however, the molecular mechanism of generating cytotoxic effector T cells of the CD4+ subset remains poorly understood. Here we compared phenotypic features and the transcriptome of EBV-specific effector-memory CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells in mice and found that both T cell types show cytotoxicity and, to our surprise, widely similar gene expression patterns relating to cytotoxicity. Similar to cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, EBV-specific cytotoxic CD4+ T cells from human peripheral blood expressed T-bet, Granzyme B, and Perforin and upregulated the degranulation marker, CD107a, immediately after restimulation. Furthermore, T-bet expression in cytotoxic CD4+ T cells was highly correlated with Granzyme B and Perforin expression at the protein level. Thus, differentiation of EBV-specific cytotoxic CD4+ T cells is possibly controlled by mechanisms shared by cytotoxic CD8+ T cells. T-bet-mediated transcriptional regulation may explain the similarity of cytotoxic effector differentiation between CD4+ T cells and CD8+ T cells, implicating that this differentiation pathway may be directed by environmental input rather than T cell subset.

Keywords