The ability of circulating CD4+ T cells to retain memories of previous antigenic encounters is a cardinal feature of the adaptive immune system. Over the past two decades, since the first description of central and effector memory T cells, many studies have examined molecular mechanisms controlling CD8+ T-cell memory, with comparatively less research into CD4+ T-cell memory. Here, we review a number of seminal studies showing that circulating memory CD4+ T cells develop directly from effector cells; and in so doing, preserve features of their effector precursors. We examine mechanisms controlling the development and phenotypes of memory CD4+ T cells, and provide an updated model that accommodates both the central and effector memory paradigm and the diverse T helper cell classification system.
Keywords: CD4 T cells; adaptive immunity; immunological memory; lymphocytes.
© 2019 Australian and New Zealand Society for Immunology Inc.