Investigating how early TCR activation events affect the differentiation of CD4+ T cells, Snook et al. utilized a set of in vivo-derived TCRs specific for a viral epitope and found that strong TCR signaling corresponded with early high CD25 expression and these cells gave rise almost exclusively to terminally differentiated effector T helper (TH1) cells. Weaker TCR signaling corresponded with lower CD25 expression and differentiation towards T follicular helper cell and memory phenotypes. Memory T cells derived from CD25hi and CD25lo T cells were equally functional upon restimulation. SHP-1 knockdown favored terminal differentiation.
CD4(+) T cell responses are composed of heterogeneous T cell receptor (TCR) signals that influence the acquisition of effector and memory characteristics. We sought to define early TCR-dependent activation events that control T cell differentiation. A polyclonal panel of TCRs specific for the same viral antigen demonstrated substantial variability in TCR signal strength, expression of CD25, and activation of nuclear factor of activated T cells and nuclear factor kappaB. After viral infection, strong TCR signals corresponded to T helper cell (TH1) differentiation, whereas T follicular helper cell and memory T cell differentiation were most efficient when TCR signals were comparatively lower. We observed substantial heterogeneity in TCR-dependent CD25 expression in vivo, and the vast majority of CD4(+) memory T cells were derived from CD25(lo) effector cells that displayed decreased TCR signaling in vivo. Nevertheless, memory T cells derived from either CD25(lo) or CD25(hi) effector cells responded vigorously to rechallenge, indicating that, although early clonal differences in CD25 expression predicted memory T cell numbers, they did not predict memory T cell function on a per cell basis. Gene transcription analysis demonstrated expression clustering based on CD25 expression and enrichment of transcripts associated with enhanced T follicular helper cell and memory development within CD25(lo) effector cells. Direct enhancement of TCR signaling via knockdown of Src homology region 2 domain-containing phosphatase 1, a tyrosine phosphatase that suppresses early TCR signaling events, favored the differentiation of TH1 effector and memory cells. We conclude that strong TCR signals during early T cell activation favor terminal TH1 differentiation over long-term TH1 and T follicular helper cell memory responses.