Generation of functional CD8+ T cell memory typically requires engagement of CD4+ T cells. However, in certain scenarios, such as acutely-resolving viral infections, effector (TE) and subsequent memory (TM) CD8+ T cell formation appear impervious to a lack of CD4+ T cell help during priming. Nonetheless, such "helpless" CD8+ TM respond poorly to pathogen rechallenge. At present, the origin and long-term evolution of helpless CD8+ T cell memory remain incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that helpless CD8+ TE differentiation is largely normal but a multiplicity of helpless CD8 TM defects, consistent with impaired memory maturation, emerge as a consequence of prolonged yet finite exposure to cognate antigen. Importantly, these defects resolve over time leading to full restoration of CD8+ TM potential and recall capacity. Our findings provide a unified explanation for helpless CD8+ T cell memory and emphasize an unexpected CD8+ TM plasticity with implications for vaccination strategies and beyond.
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