Published in

American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 7(178), p. 4027-4031, 2007

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.178.7.4027

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Cutting Edge: Limiting Amounts of IL-7 Do Not Control Contraction of CD4+ T Cell Responses

Journal article published in 2007 by Pulak Tripathi, Thomas C. Mitchell, Fred Finkelman, David A. Hildeman ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract During the acute T cell response most effector T cells die while some survive and become memory T cells. Selective expression of CD127 (IL-7Rα) on effector T cells has been proposed to engender their survival into the memory pool. We assessed the role of IL-7 in effector T cell survival using MHC class II tetramers to track a CD4+ T cell response following infection with a recombinant vaccinia virus (rVV-2W1S). Exogenous IL-7 prevented the contraction of the 2W1S-specific CD4+ T cell response after rVV-2W1S infection. IL-7 increased proliferation of, and Bcl-2 expression within, 2W1S-specific T cells; the latter was required for IL-7-driven prevention of contraction. Conversely, in vivo neutralization of IL-7 or Bcl-2 did not exacerbate the contraction of 2W1S-specific CD4+ T cells. These data suggest that IL-7 administration may enhance the survival of effector T cells but that IL-7 is not the limiting factor during normal contraction of the response.