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Publication : Cutting edge: adaptive versus innate receptor signals selectively control the pool sizes of murine IFN-γ- or IL-17-producing γδ T cells upon infection.

First Author  Ribot JC Year  2010
Journal  J Immunol Volume  185
Issue  11 Pages  6421-6425
PubMed ID  21037088 Mgi Jnum  J:166145
Mgi Id  MGI:4839835 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.1002283
Citation  Ribot JC, et al. (2010) Cutting Edge: Adaptive Versus Innate Receptor Signals Selectively Control the Pool Sizes of Murine IFN-{gamma}- or IL-17-Producing {gamma}{delta} T Cells upon Infection. J Immunol 185(11):6421-5
abstractText  gammadelta T lymphocytes are commonly viewed as embracing properties of both adaptive and innate immunity. Contributing to this is their responsiveness to pathogen products, either with or without the involvement of the TCR and its coreceptors. This study clarifies this paradoxical behavior by showing that these two modes of responsiveness are the properties of two discrete sets of murine lymphoid gammadelta T cells. Thus, MyD88 deficiency severely impaired the response to malaria infection of CD27((-)), IL-17A-producing gammadelta T cells, but not of IFN-gamma-producing gammadelta cells. Instead, the latter compartment was severely contracted by ablating CD27, which synergizes with TCRgammadelta in the induction of antiapoptotic mediators and cell cycle-promoting genes in CD27((+)), IFN-gamma-secreting gammadelta T cells. Hence, innate versus adaptive receptors differentially control the peripheral pool sizes of discrete proinflammatory gammadelta T cell subsets during immune responses to infection.
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