Identifying activated T lymphocytes and differentiating antigen-specific from bystander T cells is crucial for understanding adaptive immune responses. This study investigates the efficacy of activation-induced markers (AIMs) in distinguishing these cell populations. We measured the expression of commonly used AIMs (CD25, CD38, CD40L, CD69, CD137, HLA-DR, ICOS, and OX40) in an in vitro T-cell activation system and evaluated their sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value. We demonstrated that individual AIMs, while specific in detecting activated CD4+ T cells, poorly discriminate between antigen-specific and bystander activation, as assessed by a discriminative capacity (DC) score we developed. Our analysis revealed that dual AIM combinations significantly enhanced the ability to distinguish antigen-specific from bystander-activated T cells, achieving DC scores above 90%. These combinations also improved positive predictive value and specificity with a modest reduction in sensitivity. The CD25hi/ICOShi combination emerged as the most efficient, with an average sensitivity of 84.35%, specificity of 99.7%, and DC score of 90.12%. Validation through T-cell cloning and antigen re-stimulation confirmed the robustness of our predictions. This study provides a practical framework for researchers to optimize strategies for identifying and isolating antigen-specific human CD4+ T lymphocytes and studying their phenotype, function, and T-cell receptor repertoire.

Dual Activation-Induced Marker Combinations Efficiently Identify and Discern Antigen-Specific and Bystander-Activated Human CD4+ T Cells / M.G. Ceraolo, M. Leccese, A. Cassotta, S. Triolo, M. Bombaci, E. Coluccio, D. Prati, R. Ungaro, S. Abrignani, A. Bandera, F. Sallusto, A. Lanzavecchia, S. Notarbartolo. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1521-4141. - 55:2(2025), pp. e202451404.1-e202451404.10. [10.1002/eji.202451404]

Dual Activation-Induced Marker Combinations Efficiently Identify and Discern Antigen-Specific and Bystander-Activated Human CD4+ T Cells

M.G. Ceraolo
Primo
;
R. Ungaro;S. Abrignani;A. Bandera;S. Notarbartolo
2025

Abstract

Identifying activated T lymphocytes and differentiating antigen-specific from bystander T cells is crucial for understanding adaptive immune responses. This study investigates the efficacy of activation-induced markers (AIMs) in distinguishing these cell populations. We measured the expression of commonly used AIMs (CD25, CD38, CD40L, CD69, CD137, HLA-DR, ICOS, and OX40) in an in vitro T-cell activation system and evaluated their sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value. We demonstrated that individual AIMs, while specific in detecting activated CD4+ T cells, poorly discriminate between antigen-specific and bystander activation, as assessed by a discriminative capacity (DC) score we developed. Our analysis revealed that dual AIM combinations significantly enhanced the ability to distinguish antigen-specific from bystander-activated T cells, achieving DC scores above 90%. These combinations also improved positive predictive value and specificity with a modest reduction in sensitivity. The CD25hi/ICOShi combination emerged as the most efficient, with an average sensitivity of 84.35%, specificity of 99.7%, and DC score of 90.12%. Validation through T-cell cloning and antigen re-stimulation confirmed the robustness of our predictions. This study provides a practical framework for researchers to optimize strategies for identifying and isolating antigen-specific human CD4+ T lymphocytes and studying their phenotype, function, and T-cell receptor repertoire.
T‐cell clones; activation‐induced markers; antigen‐specific CD4+ T cells; bystander activation; human T cells
Settore MEDS-10/B - Malattie infettive
2025
11-dic-2024
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1125255
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