scholarly journals An Adaptive Chlamydia trachomatis-Specific IFN-γ-Producing CD4+ T Cell Response Is Associated With Protection Against Chlamydia Reinfection in Women

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakesh K. Bakshi ◽  
Kanupriya Gupta ◽  
Stephen J. Jordan ◽  
Xiaofei Chi ◽  
Shelly Y. Lensing ◽  
...  
1994 ◽  
Vol 6 (10) ◽  
pp. 1515-1523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Kelso ◽  
Penny Groves ◽  
Anthony B. Troutt ◽  
Michael H. Pech

2001 ◽  
Vol 194 (10) ◽  
pp. 1395-1406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Thimme ◽  
David Oldach ◽  
Kyong-Mi Chang ◽  
Carola Steiger ◽  
Stuart C. Ray ◽  
...  

The virological and immunological features of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were studied weekly for 6 months after accidental needlestick exposure in five health care workers, four of whom developed acute hepatitis that progressed to chronicity while one subject cleared the virus. In all subjects, viremia was first detectable within 1–2 weeks of inoculation, 1 month or more before the appearance of virus-specific T cells. The subject who cleared the virus experienced a prolonged episode of acute hepatitis that coincided with a CD38+ IFN-γ− CD8+ T cell response to HCV and a small reduction in viremia. Subsequently, a strong CD4+ T cell response emerged and the CD8+ T cells became CD38− and started producing IFN-γ in response to HCV, coinciding with a rapid 100,000-fold decrease in viremia that occurred without a corresponding surge of disease activity. Chronic infection developed in two subjects who failed to produce a significant T cell response and in two other subjects who initially mounted strong CD4+ T cell responses that ultimately waned. In all subjects, viremia was higher at the peak of acute hepatitis than it was when the disease began, and the disease improved during the viremia. These results provide the first insight into the host–virus relationship in humans during the incubation phase of acute HCV infection, and they provide the only insight to date into the virological and immunological characteristics of clinically asymptomatic acute HCV infection, the commonest manifestation of this disease. In addition, the results suggest that the vigor and quality of the antiviral T cell response determines the outcome of acute HCV infection, that the ability of HCV to outpace the T cell response may contribute to its tendency to persist; that the onset of hepatitis coincides with the onset of the CD8+T cell response, that disease pathogenesis and viral clearance are mediated by different CD8+ T cell populations that control HCV by both cytolytic and noncytolytic mechanisms, and that there are different pathways to viral persistence in asymptomatic and symptomatic acute HCV infection.


2008 ◽  
Vol 251 (2) ◽  
pp. 86-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanyan Wang ◽  
Maoquan Li ◽  
Min Song ◽  
Xueqing Xu ◽  
Jiaxiang Xiong ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1974-1974
Author(s):  
Suzanne M. McGoldrick ◽  
Abraham Guerrero ◽  
Tori N. Yamamoto ◽  
Colleen Delaney ◽  
Stanley R. Riddell

Abstract Abstract 1974 Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a major infectious complication in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and has been linked to deficiencies of virus-specific T cell immunity. Compared to bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplants, recipients of single or double umbilical cord blood transplants (UCBT) receive lower numbers of donor T cells that have not previously been primed to CMV and are at increased risk for early and recurrent CMV infections. At our institution, the rate of CMV reactivation in CMV seropositive patients undergoing CBT is close to 100% with standard dose Acyclovir as prophylaxis [Delaney unpublished data]. Here, we systematically analyzed the kinetics of recovery, durability, and specificity of CMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cell responses in UCBT recipients. CD8 T cell responses to CMV were analyzed by interferon γ (IFN-γ) intracellular cytokine staining after stimulating recipient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained at various time points after CBT with autologous patient fibroblasts infected with the RV798 virus, which is a mutant CMV strain that lacks the viral US genes that downregulate class I MHC and can present all potentially immunogenic epitopes of the virus. The mean absolute CD8 T cell counts were 59, 93 and 213 cells/μl and the mean CD4 T cell counts were 154, 223 and 397 cells/μl in PBMC at day 56, 180 and 365 respectively. Direct assays of PBMC after a 4–6 hour stimulation with RV798-infected fibroblasts did not detect a significant frequency of IFN-γ+ CD8+ T cells in CBT recipients, in contrast to normal CMV+ donors that exhibited frequencies of CD8+ T cells of 2–10%. However, IFN-γ+ CMV specific CD8 T cells were readily detectable in PBMC obtained as early as day 42 after UCBT from 8 out of 8 CMV positive CBT recipients after a 10 day stimulation with RV798 infected fibroblasts. These responses were sustained at multiple time points through day 365 post transplant. This result was not a consequence of in vitro priming of CD8 T cells by prolonged stimulation with RV798 since we did not detect a CMV-specific T cell response in 3 out of 3 CMV seronegative recipients at any time through day 365 with the same assay. To assess CD4+ T cell responses, we performed lymphoproliferative assays (LPA) by stimulating patient PBMC obtained at the same time points with whole CMV antigen. The proportion of patients with a positive response at day 56, 80, 180 and 365 was 0.38, 0.50, 0.88, and 1.0 respectively. All of the CMV positive CBT recipients in our study had multiple occurrences of CMV reactivation throughout the first year post CBT requiring antiviral drug therapy. The CMV-specific CD8 T cell response in normal CMV+ individuals recognizes a large number of distinct dominant and subdominant antigens and a potential explanation for the failure to control CMV after CBT is that the T cell response may not be sufficiently diverse. We analyzed the specificity of CMV specific CD8+ T cells that developed after CBT in 4 recipients by assessing recognition of COS cells transfected with the class I HLA restricting alleles and with a CMV plasmid library consisting of 142 ORFs, subdivided into pools. A response was seen in 3 out of 4 patients to at least 3 different CMV antigens by day 80 post CBT, including previously defined dominant epitopes in pp65 and this diversity was maintained through 6–12 months post transplant. One patient had a less diverse response early post CBT and the response changed over time to include recognition of new epitopes. Collectively, our results demonstrate that CD8+ and CD4+ T cells are primed to CMV antigens very early after CBT despite the infusion of limited numbers of naïve T cells and the administration of post transplant immunosuppression. The inability to control CMV infection may be due to a quantitative deficiency of CMV-specific T cells resulting from the inability of CMV-specific T cells to expand in vivo to numbers sufficient to eliminate virus replication. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document