Cargando…

Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers

Mucosal‐associated invariant T (MAIT) cells represent up to 10% of circulating human T cells. They are usually defined using combinations of non‐lineage‐specific (surrogate) markers such as anti‐TRAV1‐2, CD161, IL‐18Rα and CD26. The development of MR1‐Ag tetramers now permits the specific identifica...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gherardin, Nicholas A, Souter, Michael NT, Koay, Hui‐Fern, Mangas, Kirstie M, Seemann, Torsten, Stinear, Timothy P, Eckle, Sidonia BG, Berzins, Stuart P, d'Udekem, Yves, Konstantinov, Igor E, Fairlie, David P, Ritchie, David S, Neeson, Paul J, Pellicci, Daniel G, Uldrich, Adam P, McCluskey, James, Godfrey, Dale I
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6446826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29437263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imcb.12021
_version_ 1783408422596640768
author Gherardin, Nicholas A
Souter, Michael NT
Koay, Hui‐Fern
Mangas, Kirstie M
Seemann, Torsten
Stinear, Timothy P
Eckle, Sidonia BG
Berzins, Stuart P
d'Udekem, Yves
Konstantinov, Igor E
Fairlie, David P
Ritchie, David S
Neeson, Paul J
Pellicci, Daniel G
Uldrich, Adam P
McCluskey, James
Godfrey, Dale I
author_facet Gherardin, Nicholas A
Souter, Michael NT
Koay, Hui‐Fern
Mangas, Kirstie M
Seemann, Torsten
Stinear, Timothy P
Eckle, Sidonia BG
Berzins, Stuart P
d'Udekem, Yves
Konstantinov, Igor E
Fairlie, David P
Ritchie, David S
Neeson, Paul J
Pellicci, Daniel G
Uldrich, Adam P
McCluskey, James
Godfrey, Dale I
author_sort Gherardin, Nicholas A
collection PubMed
description Mucosal‐associated invariant T (MAIT) cells represent up to 10% of circulating human T cells. They are usually defined using combinations of non‐lineage‐specific (surrogate) markers such as anti‐TRAV1‐2, CD161, IL‐18Rα and CD26. The development of MR1‐Ag tetramers now permits the specific identification of MAIT cells based on T‐cell receptor specificity. Here, we compare these approaches for identifying MAIT cells and show that surrogate markers are not always accurate in identifying these cells, particularly the CD4(+) fraction. Moreover, while all MAIT cell subsets produced comparable levels of IFNγ, TNF and IL‐17A, the CD4(+) population produced more IL‐2 than the other subsets. In a human ontogeny study, we show that the frequencies of most MR1 tetramer(+) MAIT cells, with the exception of CD4(+) MAIT cells, increased from birth to about 25 years of age and declined thereafter. We also demonstrate a positive association between the frequency of MAIT cells and other unconventional T cells including Natural Killer T (NKT) cells and Vδ2(+) γδ T cells. Accordingly, this study demonstrates that MAIT cells are phenotypically and functionally diverse, that surrogate markers may not reliably identify all of these cells, and that their numbers are regulated in an age‐dependent manner and correlate with NKT and Vδ2(+) γδ T cells.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6446826
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-64468262019-04-10 Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers Gherardin, Nicholas A Souter, Michael NT Koay, Hui‐Fern Mangas, Kirstie M Seemann, Torsten Stinear, Timothy P Eckle, Sidonia BG Berzins, Stuart P d'Udekem, Yves Konstantinov, Igor E Fairlie, David P Ritchie, David S Neeson, Paul J Pellicci, Daniel G Uldrich, Adam P McCluskey, James Godfrey, Dale I Immunol Cell Biol Original Articles Mucosal‐associated invariant T (MAIT) cells represent up to 10% of circulating human T cells. They are usually defined using combinations of non‐lineage‐specific (surrogate) markers such as anti‐TRAV1‐2, CD161, IL‐18Rα and CD26. The development of MR1‐Ag tetramers now permits the specific identification of MAIT cells based on T‐cell receptor specificity. Here, we compare these approaches for identifying MAIT cells and show that surrogate markers are not always accurate in identifying these cells, particularly the CD4(+) fraction. Moreover, while all MAIT cell subsets produced comparable levels of IFNγ, TNF and IL‐17A, the CD4(+) population produced more IL‐2 than the other subsets. In a human ontogeny study, we show that the frequencies of most MR1 tetramer(+) MAIT cells, with the exception of CD4(+) MAIT cells, increased from birth to about 25 years of age and declined thereafter. We also demonstrate a positive association between the frequency of MAIT cells and other unconventional T cells including Natural Killer T (NKT) cells and Vδ2(+) γδ T cells. Accordingly, this study demonstrates that MAIT cells are phenotypically and functionally diverse, that surrogate markers may not reliably identify all of these cells, and that their numbers are regulated in an age‐dependent manner and correlate with NKT and Vδ2(+) γδ T cells. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-03-25 2018-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6446826/ /pubmed/29437263 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imcb.12021 Text en © 2018 The Authors Immunology & Cell Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australasian Society for Immunology Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Gherardin, Nicholas A
Souter, Michael NT
Koay, Hui‐Fern
Mangas, Kirstie M
Seemann, Torsten
Stinear, Timothy P
Eckle, Sidonia BG
Berzins, Stuart P
d'Udekem, Yves
Konstantinov, Igor E
Fairlie, David P
Ritchie, David S
Neeson, Paul J
Pellicci, Daniel G
Uldrich, Adam P
McCluskey, James
Godfrey, Dale I
Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title_full Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title_fullStr Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title_full_unstemmed Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title_short Human blood MAIT cell subsets defined using MR1 tetramers
title_sort human blood mait cell subsets defined using mr1 tetramers
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6446826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29437263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imcb.12021
work_keys_str_mv AT gherardinnicholasa humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT soutermichaelnt humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT koayhuifern humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT mangaskirstiem humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT seemanntorsten humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT stineartimothyp humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT ecklesidoniabg humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT berzinsstuartp humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT dudekemyves humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT konstantinovigore humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT fairliedavidp humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT ritchiedavids humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT neesonpaulj humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT pelliccidanielg humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT uldrichadamp humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT mccluskeyjames humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers
AT godfreydalei humanbloodmaitcellsubsetsdefinedusingmr1tetramers