T-cell stimuli independently sum to regulate an inherited clonal division fate
- Author(s)
- Marchingo, JM; Prevedello, G; Kan, A; Heinzel, S; Hodgkin, PD; Duffy, KR;
- Journal Title
- Nat Commun
- Publication Type
- Journal Article
- Abstract
- In the presence of antigen and costimulation, T cells undergo a characteristic response of expansion, cessation and contraction. Previous studies have revealed that population-level reproducibility is a consequence of multiple clones exhibiting considerable disparity in burst size, highlighting the requirement for single-cell information in understanding T-cell fate regulation. Here we show that individual T-cell clones resulting from controlled stimulation in vitro are strongly lineage imprinted with highly correlated expansion fates. Progeny from clonal families cease dividing in the same or adjacent generations, with inter-clonal variation producing burst-size diversity. The effects of costimulatory signals on individual clones sum together with stochastic independence; therefore, the net effect across multiple clones produces consistent, but heterogeneous population responses. These data demonstrate that substantial clonal heterogeneity arises through differences in experience of clonal progenitors, either through stochastic antigen interaction or by differences in initial receptor sensitivities.
- Publisher
- Springer Nature
- Research Division(s)
- Immunology
- PubMed ID
- 27869196
- Publisher's Version
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13540
- Open Access at Publisher's Site
- http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13540
- NHMRC Grants
- NHMRC/1010654, NHMRC/1054925, NHMRC/361646,
- Terms of Use/Rights Notice
- Refer to copyright notice on published article.
Creation Date: 2016-11-24 03:36:56
Last Modified: 2016-11-24 03:49:31