Abstract

Upon resolution of an acute viral infection, during latent-reactivating infection and during chronic active infections virus-specific T-cells differentiate into distinct subsets that differ in phenotype, longevity, transcriptional, metabolic, and epigenetic profiles, and effector functions. With recent advances in single-cell profiling, this substantial heterogeneity has become apparent and new subsets of virus-specific T cells, either of stable or transitory nature, are being identified. A unifying principle of T cells emerging in these different conditions is their precursor-progeny relationship. For acute and resolved viral infections, this relationship becomes apparent during re-challenge, whereas a constant differentiation of progenitor T cells into more differentiated cells occurs during latent-reactivating and active chronic viral infections. In this review, we summarize and discuss current knowledge about T-cell heterogeneity and progenitor-progeny relationships in the setting of persistent viral infections.

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