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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2003-Dec

Turning immunological memory into amnesia by depletion of dividing T cells.

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Bertrand Bellier
Véronique Thomas-Vaslin
Marie-Françoise Saron
David Klatzmann

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Immunological memory, defined as more efficient immune responses on antigen reexposure, can last for decades. The current paradigm is that memory is maintained by antigen-experienced "memory T cells" that can be long-lived quiescent or dividing. The contribution of T cell division to memory maintenance is poorly known and has important clinical implications. In this study, we directly addressed the role of dividing T cells in immunological memory maintenance by evaluating the consequences of their elimination. The specific ablation of dividing T cells was obtained by administration of ganciclovir to immune mice expressing the herpes simplex type 1 thymidine kinase suicide gene in T cells. We show that depletion of dividing T cells for 5 or 2 weeks suffices to abolish in vitro and in vivo memory responses against the male H-Y transplantation alloantigen or against lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus antigens, respectively. Similar results were obtained after the nonspecific elimination of all dividing cells by using hydroxyurea, a cytostatic toxic agent commonly used for cancer chemotherapy. This immune amnesia occurred in otherwise immunocompetent mice and despite the persistence of functional quiescent T cells displaying a "memory" phenotype. Thus, division of antigen-experienced T cells is an absolute requirement for immunological memory maintenance and the current concept of memory T cells is challenged.

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