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Browsing by Subject "Human influenza"

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    Role of T cell immunity in recovery from influenza virus infection
    (Elsevier, 2013) Sun, Jie; Braciale, Thomas J.; Pediatrics, School of Medicine
    Influenza virus infection has the potential to induce excess pulmonary inflammation and massive tissue damage in the infected host. Conventional CD4(+) and CD8(+) as well as nonconventional innate like T cells respond to infection and make an essential contribution to the clearance of virus infected cells and the resolution of pulmonary inflammation and injury. Emerging evidence in recent years has suggested a critical role of local interactions between lung effector T cells and antigen presenting cells in guiding the accumulation, differentiation and function of effector T cells beyond their initial activation in the draining lymph nodes during influenza infection. As such, lung effector CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells utilize multiple effector and regulatory mechanisms to eliminate virus infected cells as well as fine tune the control of pulmonary inflammation and injury. Elucidating the mechanisms by which conventional and nonconventional T cells orchestrate their response in the lung as well as defining the downstream events required for the resolution of influenza infection will be important areas of future basic research which in turn may result in new therapeutic strategies to control the severity of influenza virus infection.
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    Tissue-resident CD4+ T helper cells assist the development of protective respiratory B and CD8+ T cell memory responses
    (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2021) Son, Young Min; Cheon, In Su; Wu, Yue; Li, Chaofan; Wang, Zheng; Gao, Xiaochen; Chen, Yao; Takahashi, Yoshimasa; Fu, Yang-Xin; Dent, Alexander L.; Kaplan, Mark H.; Taylor, Justin J.; Cui, Weiguo; Sun, Jie; Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine
    Much remains unknown about the roles of CD4+ T helper cells in shaping localized memory B cell and CD8+ T cell immunity in the mucosal tissues. Here, we report that lung T helper cells provide local assistance for the optimal development of tissue-resident memory B and CD8+ T cells after the resolution of primary influenza virus infection. We have identified a population of T cells in the lung that exhibit characteristics of both follicular T helper and TRM cells, and we have termed these cells as resident helper T (TRH) cells. Optimal TRH cell formation was dependent on transcription factors involved in T follicular helper and resident memory T cell development including BCL6 and Bhlhe40. We show that TRH cells deliver local help to CD8+ T cells through IL-21-dependent mechanisms. Our data have uncovered the presence of a tissue-resident helper T cell population in the lung that plays a critical role in promoting the development of protective B cell and CD8+ T cell responses.
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