The major focus of my lab is to investigate the mechanisms that
control protective immunity to influenza and other respiratory virus
infections. These pathogens are a major cause of human mortality
every year. Cytotoxic T cells (CTL) play an important role in viral
clearance and can provide short-term heterosubtypic immunity, indicating
that they could be an effective target for vaccination. Unfortunately,
cellular immunity to viral infections lasts only a few months even
when large self-renewing populations of virus-specific memory CD8
T cells have been established. An important goal of my lab is to
determine why protective cellular immunity declines so rapidly and
why circulating memory T cells become ineffective at accelerating
viral clearance during secondary challenge. Better understanding
of the mechanisms that regulate T cell responses in vivo are likely
to lead to more effective methods of vaccination against viruses
and other pathogens that invade the respiratory tract. Transgenic
mice, recombinant strains of influenza virus and MHC class I tetramer
technology will be used to track CD4 and CD8 T cell response in
vivo by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Influenza virus
infection is largely limited to the respiratory tract, enabling
us to analyze the local effects of a tissue-specific infection.
In a recent study, we showed that processed T cell antigens persist
near the site of virus amplification in the lungs and draining lymph
node for at least two months after influenza virus infection (Zammit
et al.). Our data show that these processed T cell antigens
have a profound influence on local T cell migration and activation
in the lungs. Ongoing studies will investigate the effects of residual
antigen presentation on memory T cells responses in vivo after influenza
and other viral infections. These studies will include analysis
of the antigen presentation pathways that are used during the different
stages of the response. The effects of residual antigen presentation
on adhesion molecules and other inflammatory mediators that influence
local T cell migration will also be analyzed. Evidence suggests
that T cell activation and location at the time of secondary viral
challenge are likely to be important factors in protection. We will
therefore investigate whether residual antigen presentation is an
essential component of protective immunity.
Another long-term goal of my lab is to investigate how antibody
responses influence, and potentially interfere with, T cell responses
in immune animals. Preliminary data show that repeated pulmonary
challenge with the same respiratory virus leads to extensive proliferation
by virus-specific CD8 T cells in the draining lymph nodes, but little
or no T cell response or local inflammation in the lungs. This study
will investigate whether neutralizing antibodies redirect antigen
presentation in the lungs to a pathway that is suppressive for T
cell activation.
Cauley, L.S., Cookenham, T., Miller, T.B., Adams, P.S., Vignali,
K.M., Vignali, D.A.A. and Woodland. D.L. 2002. Cutting edge: Virus-specific
CD4+ memory T cells in nonlymphoid tissues express a highly activated
phenotype. J. Immunol. 169:6655-6658.
Ely, K.H., Cauley, L.S., Roberts, A.D. Brennan, J.W., Cookenham,
T., and Woodland D.L. 2003. Nonspecific recruitment of memory CD8+
T cells to the lung airways during respiratory virus infections.
J. Immunol. 170:1423-1429.
Cauley, L.S., Cookenham, T., Hogan, R.J., Crowe, S.R., and Woodland.
D.L. 2003. Renewal of peripheral CD8+ memory T cells during secondary
viral infection of antibody sufficient mice. J. Immunol.
170:5597-5606.
Zammit, D., Cauley L.S., Pham Q-M and Lefrancois L. 2005. Dendritic
cells maximize the memory CD8 T cell response to infection. Immunity
22:561-570.
Zammit, D., Turner, D.L., Klonowski. K.D., Lefrancois, L., and Cauley, L.S. 2006. Residual antigen presentation after influenza virus infection affects T cell activation and migration. Immunity 24(4):439-49.
Khanna KM, Aguila CC, Redman JM, Suarez-Ramirez JE, Lefrançois L, Cauley LS. 2008
In situ imaging reveals different responses by naïve and memory CD8 T cells to late antigen presentation by lymph node DC after influenza virus infection. Eur J Immunol. 38(12):3304-15

Left to right: Dr. Linda Cauley, Keith Bouchard, Zhijuan Qiu, Young-Tae Lee, Jenny Suarez-Ramirez, Carolina Aguila