A Macrophage Colony-Stimulating-Factor-Producing γδ T Cell Subset Prevents Malarial Parasitemic Recurrence

Murad R. Mamedov,Anja Scholzen, Ramesh V. Nair,Katherine Cumnock, Justin A. Kenkel,Jose Henrique M. Oliveira, Damian L. Trujillo,Naresha Saligrama,Yue Zhang,Florian Rubelt, David S. Schneider,Yueh-hsiu Chien,Robert W. Sauerwein,Mark M. Davis

Immunity(2018)

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摘要
Despite evidence that γδ T cells play an important role during malaria, their precise role remains unclear. During murine malaria induced by Plasmodium chabaudi infection and in human P. falciparum infection, we found that γδ T cells expanded rapidly after resolution of acute parasitemia, in contrast to αβ T cells that expanded at the acute stage and then declined. Single-cell sequencing showed that TRAV15N-1 (Vδ6.3) γδ T cells were clonally expanded in mice and had convergent complementarity-determining region 3 sequences. These γδ T cells expressed specific cytokines, M-CSF, CCL5, CCL3, which are known to act on myeloid cells, indicating that this γδ T cell subset might have distinct functions. Both γδ T cells and M-CSF were necessary for preventing parasitemic recurrence. These findings point to an M-CSF-producing γδ T cell subset that fulfills a specialized protective role in the later stage of malaria infection when αβ T cells have declined.
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γδ T cells,gamma-delta T cells,Vδ6.3,TRAV15N-1,M-CSF,TγδM,malaria,recrudescence,Plasmodium chabaudi,Plasmodium falciparum
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