Abstract

Reexposure to a pathogen triggers the activation of memory T cells that have already encountered a similar microbe. These long-lived CD4 T cells either circulate through the blood and tissues or reside within organs and are referred to as tissue-resident T cells (CD4 TRM ). In the current issue of the European Journal of Immunology [Eur. J. Immunol. 2023. 53: 2250247] issue, Curham etal. found that tissue-resident memory CD4 T cells in the lung and nasal tissues can respond to noncognate immune challenges. CD4 TRM cells, which were formed in response to Bordetella pertussis, proliferated and produced IL-17A in response to a secondary challenge with heat-killed Klebsiella pneumonia or lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This bystander response depends on the presence of dendritic cells that provide inflammatory cytokines. Furthermore, post K. pneumonia, intranasal immunization with whole cell pertussis vaccine reduced bacterial burden in the nasal tissue in a CD4 T-cell-dependent manner. The study indicates that the noncognate activation of TRM may serve as an innate-like immune response that rapidly develops before establishing a new pathogen-specific adaptive immune response.

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