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Wiley, Immunology & Cell Biology, 3(87), p. 255-259, 2009

DOI: 10.1038/icb.2008.105

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Equivalent stimulation of naive and memory CD8 T cells by DNA vaccination: a dendritic cell‐dependent process

Journal article published in 2009 by Sammy Bedoui, Gayle M. Davey ORCID, Andrew M. Lew ORCID, William R. Heath ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

CD8 T-cell priming following DNA vaccination has been shown to confer protection against infections and tumors. These vaccines, however, have been disappointing in their ability to boost memory responses in prime-boost settings. We recently found that migratory dendritic cell (DC) subsets inefficiently stimulate memory CD8 T cells, raising the possibility that the poor boosting capacity of DNA encoded antigens might relate to their presentation by subsets of DCs that are only capable of efficiently stimulating naive T cells. Here, we show that DCs are required for T-cell priming in vivo following intradermal immunization with DNA-encoded antigens and that epidermal Langerhans cells are relatively unimportant. We then provide evidence that naive and memory CD8 T cells respond equally to DNA-encoded antigen. These findings show that immunization to DNA-encoded antigens is strongly DC-dependent and that the failure to boost memory T-cell immunity efficiently is not a consequence of a differential capacity of this form of antigen to stimulate naive or memory T cells.