1. A dynamic map of antigen recognition by CD4 T cells at the site of Leishmania major infection.
- Author
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Filipe-Santos O, Pescher P, Breart B, Lippuner C, Aebischer T, Glaichenhaus N, Späth GF, and Bousso P
- Subjects
- Animals, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Leishmania major pathogenicity, Leishmaniasis parasitology, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Microscopy, Confocal methods, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods, Staining and Labeling methods, Antigens, Protozoan immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Dendritic Cells parasitology, Leishmania major immunology, Leishmaniasis immunology
- Abstract
CD4 T helper cells play a central role in the control of infection by intracellular parasites. How efficiently pathogen-specific CD4 T cells detect infected cells in vivo is unclear. Here, we employed intravital two-photon imaging to examine the behavior of pathogen-specific CD4 T cells at the site of Leishmania major infection. While activated CD4 T cells enter the inflamed tissue irrespective of their antigen specificity, pathogen-specific T cells preferentially decelerated and accumulated in infected regions of the dermis. Antigen recognition by CD4 T cells was heterogeneous, involving both stable and dynamic contacts with infected phagocytes. However, not all infected cells induced arrest or deceleration of pathogen-specific T cells, and dense clusters of infected cells were poorly accessible to migrating T cells. Thus, disparities in the dynamics of T cell contacts with infected cells and local variation in T cell access to infected cells are important elements of the host-pathogen interplay.
- Published
- 2009
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