Initial TCR transgenic precursor frequency alters functional behaviour of CD8 T cells responding to acute infection

Author(s):  
Thomas Wirth ◽  
John T. Harty
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jimena Salido ◽  
María Julia Ruiz ◽  
César Trifone ◽  
María Inés Figueroa ◽  
María Paula Caruso ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwang-Soo Shin ◽  
Insu Jeon ◽  
Byung-Seok Kim ◽  
Il-Kyu Kim ◽  
Young-Jun Park ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (18) ◽  
pp. 3718-3725 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cécile Alanio ◽  
Fabrice Lemaitre ◽  
Helen K. W. Law ◽  
Milena Hasan ◽  
Matthew L. Albert

Abstract The number of antigen-specific naive CD8+ T cells is believed to be important in the shaping of adaptive immune responses, and is predictive for the magnitude of priming responses in mouse models. Because of extremely low precursor frequencies, knowledge about these cells comes from indirect techniques and estimations. Here, we present a strategy based on the combination of tetramer staining, magnetic-bead enrichment, and multiparametric cytometry, which permitted direct detection and analysis of CD8+ T cells reactive for 6 different naive epitopes (MART-126-35, HIV-1 Gag p1777-85, hepatitis C virus [HCV] NS31406-1415, HCV Core132-140, NY-ESO-1157-165, and cytomegalovirus [CMV] pp65495-503). Interestingly, we detected higher than 100-fold differences in precursor frequency across these epitopes (from 0.6 × 10−6 to 1.3 × 10−4), but conserved frequencies among humans. Development of a procedure for direct assessment of T-cell precursor frequency in humans has important implications, with particular relevance to vaccine development and monitoring of tumor and self-reactive T cells.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katja Nitschke ◽  
Hendrik Luxenburger ◽  
Muthamia M. Kiraithe ◽  
Robert Thimme ◽  
Christoph Neumann-Haefelin

Approximately 500 million people are chronically infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV) or hepatitis C virus (HCV) worldwide and are thus at high risk of progressive liver disease, leading to liver fibrosis, cirrhosis and ultimately hepatocellular cancer. Virus-specific CD8+ T-cells play a major role in viral clearance in >90% of adult patients who clear HBV and in approximately 30% of patients who clear HCV in acute infection. However, several mechanisms contribute to the failure of the adaptive CD8+ T-cell response in those patients who progress to chronic infection. These include viral mutations leading to escape from the CD8+ T-cell response as well as exhaustion and dysfunction of virus-specific CD8+ T-cells. Antiviral efficacy of the virus-specific CD8+ T-cell response also strongly depends on its restriction by specific human leukocyte antigens (HLA) class I alleles. Our review will summarize the role of HLA-A, B and C-restricted CD8+ T-cells in HBV and HCV infection. Due to the current lack of a comprehensive database of HBV- and HCV-specific CD8+ T-cell epitopes, we also provide a summary of the repertoire of currently well-described HBV- and HCV-specific CD8+ T-cell epitopes. A better understanding of the factors that contribute to the success or failure of virus-specific CD8+ T-cells may help to develop new therapeutic options for HBV eradication in patients with chronic HBV infection (therapeutic vaccination and/or immunomodulation) as well as a prophylactic vaccine against HCV infection.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (17) ◽  
pp. 3466-3477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydie Trautmann ◽  
Florentin-Martial Mbitikon-Kobo ◽  
Jean-Philippe Goulet ◽  
Yoav Peretz ◽  
Yu Shi ◽  
...  

AbstractImmediate-early host-virus interactions that occur during the first weeks after HIV infection have a major impact on disease progression. The mechanisms underlying the failure of HIV-specific CD8 T-cell response to persist and control viral replication early in infection are yet to be characterized. In this study, we performed a thorough phenotypic, gene expression and functional analysis to compare HIV-specific CD8 T cells in acutely and chronically infected subjects. We showed that HIV-specific CD8 T cells in primary infection can be distinguished by their metabolic state, rate of proliferation, and susceptibility to apoptosis. HIV-specific CD8 T cells in acute/early HIV infection secreted less IFN-γ but were more cytotoxic than their counterparts in chronic infection. Importantly, we showed that the levels of IL-7R expression and the capacity of HIV-specific CD8 T cells to secrete IL-2 on antigenic restimulation during primary infection were inversely correlated with the viral set-point. Altogether, these data suggest an altered metabolic state of HIV-specific CD8 T cells in primary infection resulting from hyperproliferation and stress induced signals, demonstrate the discordant function of HIV-specific CD8 T cells during early/acute infection, and highlight the importance of T-cell maintenance for viral control.


2002 ◽  
Vol 195 (5) ◽  
pp. 657-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph N. Blattman ◽  
Rustom Antia ◽  
David J.D. Sourdive ◽  
Xiaochi Wang ◽  
Susan M. Kaech ◽  
...  

The constraint of fitting a diverse repertoire of antigen specificities in a limited total population of lymphocytes results in the frequency of naive cells specific for any given antigen (defined as the precursor frequency) being below the limit of detection by direct measurement. We have estimated this precursor frequency by titrating a known quantity of antigen-specific cells into naive recipients. Adoptive transfer of naive antigen-specific T cell receptor transgenic cells into syngeneic nontransgenic recipients, followed by stimulation with specific antigen, results in activation and expansion of both donor and endogenous antigen-specific cells in a dose-dependent manner. The precursor frequency is equal to the number of transferred cells when the transgenic and endogenous responses are of equal magnitude. Using this method we have estimated the precursor frequency of naive CD8 T cells specific for the H-2Db–restricted GP33–41 epitope of LCMV to be 1 in 2 × 105. Thus, in an uninfected mouse containing ∼2-4 × 107 naive CD8 T cells we estimate there to be 100–200 epitope-specific cells. After LCMV infection these 100–200 GP33-specific naive CD8 T cells divide >14 times in 1 wk to reach a total of ∼107 cells. Approximately 5% of these activated GP33-specific effector CD8 T cells survive to generate a memory pool consisting of ∼5 × 105 cells. Thus, an acute LCMV infection results in a >1,000-fold increase in precursor frequency of DbGP33-specific CD8 T cells from 2 × 102 naive cells in uninfected mice to 5 × 105 memory cells in immunized mice.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 100 (3) ◽  
pp. 933-940 ◽  
Author(s):  
Padraic J. Dunne ◽  
Jeffery M. Faint ◽  
Nancy H. Gudgeon ◽  
Jean M. Fletcher ◽  
Fiona J. Plunkett ◽  
...  

Abstract During acute infection, latent and lytic Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) epitope-specific CD8+ T cells have a CD45RO+CD45RA− phenotype. However, after resolution of the infection, a large proportion of these cells, particularly those specific for lytic viral epitopes, re-express the CD45RA molecule. The role of CD8+ CD45RA+ T cells in ongoing immunity to EBV and other viruses is unknown. We now demonstrate that, relative to their CD45RO+ counterparts, the EBV-specific CD8+ T cells that revert to CD45RA expression after acute infectious mononucleosis are not in cell cycle, have longer telomeres, and are more resistant to apoptosis partly because of increased Bcl-2 expression. However, the EBV-specific CD8+CD45RA+ T cells have shorter telomeres than the total CD8+ CD45RA+ T-cell pool and predominantly express low levels of the CCR7 chemokine receptor, indicating that they are not naive cells. In addition, EBV-specific CD8+CD45RA+ T cells can be induced to proliferate and exhibit potent cytotoxic activity against target cells loaded with specific peptide. Our results strongly suggest, therefore, that EBV-specific CD8+ CD45RA+ T cells represent a stabilized virus-specific memory pool and not terminally differentiated effector cells. The identification of mechanisms that enable stable virus-specific CD8+ T cells to persist after acute infection may lead to the enhancement of antiviral immunity in immunocompromised and elderly persons.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (5) ◽  
pp. 2103-2108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark K. Slifka ◽  
Jason K. Whitmire ◽  
Rafi Ahmed

Abstract Immunizing bone marrow donors prior to bone marrow transplant (BMT) has the potential for adoptively transferring specific immunity against opportunistic pathogens. Studies have shown that long-term antibody production occurs in the bone marrow and that specific humoral immunity may be transferred from donor to recipient following BMT. However, the magnitude and duration of T-cell memory in the bone marrow compartment has not been adequately investigated. In this study, virus-specific CD8+ T-cell responses in the bone marrow were compared with those observed in the spleen of mice acutely infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). During the acute stages of infection, most CD8+ T cells in the spleen and bone marrow showed upregulated surface expression of the activation/memory marker, LFA-1 (LFA-1hi). After clearing LCMV infection, the antiviral immune response subsided to homeostatic levels and the ratio of CD8+/LFA-1hi to CD8+/LFA-1lo T cells in the spleen and bone marrow of LCMV immune mice returned to the value observed in naive mice. Virus-specific ex vivo effector cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) responses could be identified in both spleen and bone marrow compartments at 8 days postinfection. LCMV-specific CTL precursor (CTLp) frequencies peaked in the bone marrow at 8 days postinfection and averaged one in 200 to one in 650 CD8+ T cells, a frequency similar to that observed in the spleen. After clearing the acute infection, potent LCMV-specific CTL memory responses could be demonstrated in the bone marrow for at least 325 days postinfection, indicating long-term persistence of antiviral T cells at this site. Adoptive transfer of LCMV-immune bone marrow into severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice provided protection against viral challenge, whereas SCID mice that received naive bone marrow became chronically infected upon challenge with LCMV. These results indicate that after acute viral infection, virus-specific memory T cells can be found in the bone marrow compartment and are maintained for an extended period, and when adoptively transferred into an immunodeficient host, they are capable of conferring protection against chronic viral infection.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3692-3692
Author(s):  
Sulima Geerman ◽  
Fernanda M Pascutti ◽  
Sudeep Bhushal ◽  
Martijn A. Nolte

Abstract The bone marrow (BM) not only serves as a primary, but also as a secondary lymphoid organ, since it can mediate primary T cell responses against blood-borne antigens and it harbors a significant portion of the memory T cell compartment. Yet, it remains unclear to what extent BM T cells affect the local hematopoietic process. This is important from a clinical perspective, since the development of BM failure and anemia is frequently associated with (chronic) T cell-mediated inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis and viral infections. We postulate that particularly hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) may be susceptible to T cell activity, since HSCs are localized in endothelial BM niches and are thus in close vicinity of where T cells enter the BM parenchyma and get activated. In support of this, we have previously shown that IFNγ, one of the key cytokines produced by activated T cells, strongly impairs HSC self-renewal and enhances their differentiation towards monoctyes, at the expense of neutrophils and erythrocytes. To examine the impact of T cells on HSC function, we performed co-culture assays and found that T cells from murine BM actually have a positive impact on HSC function, as they enhance both their differentiation and self-renewal capacity. This feature is restricted to a subset of memory CD8 T cells in the BM, since neither naïve T cells from BM nor memory CD8 T cells from the spleen showed the same effect. Correspondingly, transgenic mice with only naïve and no memory T cells have fewer HSC numbers than control mice, which can be transiently restored when memory CD8 BM T cells are injected. To test the relevance of these findings in an inflammatory setting, we infected mice with the Armstrong-strain of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), which induces an acute infection that leads to a strong influx of antigen-experienced T cells in the BM. We found that LCMV-specific memory CD8 T cells isolated from BM 12 days after infection increased both the differentiation and self-renewal capacity of HSCs. Interestingly, HSCs isolated from infected mice also displayed an enhanced propensity to differentiate towards myeloid cells compared to HSCs from non-infected control mice, whereas their self-renewal capacity was not altered. To test whether chronically stimulated T cells are also able to influence HSC function, we infected mice with LCMV clone 13, which leads to a chronic infection and induces exhaustion of the virus-specific T cells. Interestingly, virus-specific T cells isolated from BM 27 days after infection, which were exhausted based on phenotype and function, did not influence HSC differentiation but they were still able to enhance the self-renewal of HSCs from non-infected control mice, although to a lesser extent than in the acute infection. These data illustrate that antigen-experienced memory CD8 T cells in BM have a positive impact on the function of HSCs. Although cytokines produced by activated T cells, such as IFNγ and TNFα, can dramatically impair HSC maintenance, it is intriguing that memory T cells can actually fulfill a positive function on the HSC compartment. We speculate that homing of memory T cells to the BM after viral infection may play an important role in restoring the damage on the hematopoietic compartment that is inflicted by the infection itself and the ensuing cytokine storm. Enhancement of such a positive feedback mechanism may be a promising new strategy for treatment of patients with BM failure. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1991 ◽  
Vol 137 (2) ◽  
pp. 420-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher M. Walker ◽  
Graeme A. Thomson-Honnebier ◽  
Frank C. Hsueh ◽  
Ann L. Erickson ◽  
Li-Zhen Pan ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
T Cells ◽  

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