Skip to main content
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2005 Nov 28;62(23):2853–2866. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5232-y

Mucosal effector memory T cells: the other side of the coin

H Cheroutre 1,, L Madakamutil 1
PMCID: PMC11139218  PMID: 16314932

Abstract.

Immunological memory allows for rapid and effective protective immunity to previously encountered pathogens. New insights in understanding specific memory differentiation and function have now indicated that in addition to providing enhanced immunity, an important purpose of immunological memory is to provide immediate protection at all sites of the body, including non-lymphoid tissues. Effector memory CD8 T cells have the capacity to reside long-term at epithelial surfaces, where they allow for rapid containment of the invading pathogens at the local entry site and prevent systemic spreading and excessive immune responses. The accumulation of tissue-specific memory T cell subsets, together with cross-reactivity of these antigen-experienced T cells even to unrelated pathogens, provides flexibility and expansion of their specificity repertoire that over time greatly surpasses that of the declining naïve T cell populations. This review will discuss new insights into T cell memory. We will focus in particular on the generation and function of effector memory CD8 T cells at the intestinal mucosa, which represents one of the largest entry sites for pathogens.

Key words. Memory T cells, intestinal mucosal T cells, T cell differentiation, T cell priming, T cell homing, mucosal memory, systemic memory, protective immunity

Footnotes

Received 26 May 2005; received after revision 26 July 2005; accepted 6 September 2005


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

RESOURCES