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Nature Immunology 8, 1060–1066 (1 October 2007) | doi:10.1038/ni1505

Minimal activation of memory CD8+ T cell by tissue-derived dendritic cells favors the stimulation of naive CD8+ T cells

Gabrielle T Belz , Sammy Bedoui , Fiona Kupresanin , Francis R Carbone & William R Heath

Of the many dendritic cell (DC) subsets, DCs expressing the monomorphic coreceptor CD8 α-chain (CD8α) are localized permanently in lymphoid organs, whereas 'tissue-derived DCs' remain in nonlymphoid tissues until they 'capture' antigen and then move to local lymph nodes. Here we show that after lung infection, both naive and memory CD8+ 'killer' T cells responded to influenza virus antigens presented by lymph node–resident CD8α+ DCs, but only naive cells responded to antigens presented by lung-derived DCs. This difference provides a mechanism for priming naive T cell responses in conditions in which robust memory predominates. Our findings have implications for immunity to pathogens that can mutate their T cell epitopes, such as influenza virus and human immunodeficiency virus, and challenge the long-held view that memory T cells have less-stringent requirements for activation than naive T cells have.