Abstract

Adaptive immunity relies on the generation and maintenance of memory T cells to provide protection against repeated antigen exposure. It has been hypothesised that a self-renewing population of T cells, named stem cell–like memory T (TSCM) cells, are responsible for maintaining memory. However, it is not clear if the dynamics of TSCM cells in vivo are compatible with this hypothesis. To address this issue, we investigated the dynamics of TSCM cells under physiological conditions in humans in vivo using a multidisciplinary approach that combines mathematical modelling, stable isotope labelling, telomere length analysis, and cross-sectional data from vaccine recipients. We show that, unexpectedly, the average longevity of a TSCM clone is very short (half-life < 1 year, degree of self-renewal = 430 days): far too short to constitute a stem cell population. However, we also find that the TSCM population is comprised of at least 2 kinetically distinct subpopulations that turn over at different rates. Whilst one subpopulation is rapidly replaced (half-life = 5 months) and explains the rapid average turnover of the bulk TSCM population, the half-life of the other TSCM subpopulation is approximately 9 years, consistent with the longevity of the recall response. We also show that this latter population exhibited a high degree of self-renewal, with a cell residing without dying or differentiating for 15% of our lifetime. Finally, although small, the population was not subject to excessive stochasticity. We conclude that the majority of TSCM cells are not stem cell–like but that there is a subpopulation of TSCM cells whose dynamics are compatible with their putative role in the maintenance of T cell memory.

Highlights

  • The maintenance of long-lived T cell memory is one of the hallmarks of adaptive immunity [1, 2]

  • It has been hypothesised that there is a dedicated population of cells called stem cell–like memory T (TSCM) cells that have stem cell–like behaviour and are responsible for the persistence of T cell memory

  • We show that a subset of TSCM cells, in healthy humans in vivo, have the dynamic properties of self-renewal and clonal longevity necessary to maintain long-lived immune memory

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Summary

Introduction

The maintenance of long-lived T cell memory is one of the hallmarks of adaptive immunity [1, 2]. Central memory T (TCM) cells (CD45RA―CCR7+ in humans) were previously thought to constitute the stem cell–like memory precursor population. Evidence supporting the ‘stemness’ of TCM cells includes their capacity to differentiate into effector memory T (TEM) cells and T effector (TEFF) cells [10, 11]. This hypothesis was further strengthened by cell fate–tracking experiments in mice (using genetic barcoding and single-cell transfer), showing that TCM cells had the capacity to self-renew and that a single TCM cell could reconstitute immune protection against an otherwise lethal pathogen [12, 13]

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