scholarly journals Lymphocyte and Antibody Responses Reduce Enterovirus 71 Lethality in Mice by Decreasing Tissue Viral Loads

2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (13) ◽  
pp. 6477-6483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Wen Lin ◽  
Kung-Chao Chang ◽  
Chia-Min Kao ◽  
Shih-Ping Chang ◽  
Yuk-Ying Tung ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Enterovirus 71 (EV71) infects the central nervous system and causes death and long-term neurological sequelae in hundreds of thousands of young children, but its pathogenesis remains elusive. Immunopathological mechanisms have been suspected to contribute to the pathogenesis of neurological symptoms, so anti-inflammatory agents have been used to treat patients with neurological symptoms. The present study was therefore designed to investigate the functions of lymphocyte and antibody responses in EV71 infection using a mouse model. Immunohistochemical staining analysis revealed virus and three types of lymphocytes, B cells, CD4 T cells, and CD8 T cells, in the spinal cord of an EV71-infected patient who died. A study of mice showed that the levels of virus and lymphocytes in brains and antibody titers in sera were elevated during the time when the mice succumbed to death in a phenomenon analogous to that observed in patients. Further studies demonstrated that after infection, the disease severity, mortality, and tissue viral loads of mice deficient in B, CD4 T, or CD8 T cells were significantly higher than those of wild-type mice. In addition, treatment with a virus-specific antibody, but not a control antibody, before or after infection significantly reduced the disease severity, mortality, and tissue viral loads of mice deficient in B cells. Our results show that both lymphocyte and antibody responses protect mice from EV71 infection. Our study suggests the use of vaccines and virus-specific antibodies to control fatal outbreaks and raises caution over the use of corticosteroids to treat EV71-infected patients with neurological symptoms.

2013 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 1019-1027 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang-Hsiu Shen ◽  
Chia-Chun Tsai ◽  
Li-Chiu Wang ◽  
Kung-Chao Chang ◽  
Yuk-Ying Tung ◽  
...  

Enterovirus 71 (EV71) infection has induced fatal encephalitis in thousands of young children in the Asia–Pacific region over the last decade. EV71 infection continues to cause serious problems in areas with outbreaks, because vaccines and antiviral therapies are not available. Lymphocytes are present in the brains of infected patients and mice, and they protect mice from infection by decreasing the viral burden. The chemokines responsible for recruiting lymphocytes to infected organs are yet to be identified. Among the lymphocyte chemokines detected, high levels of interferon-gamma-inducible protein-10 (IP-10) are found in the plasma and cerebral spinal fluid of patients with brainstem encephalitis as compared with the levels of a monokine induced by gamma interferon (Mig). Using a murine model to investigate the induction of IP-10 by EV71 infection, we observed that EV71 infection significantly enhanced IP-10 protein expression in the serum and brain, with kinetics similar to viral titres in the blood and brain. Brain neurons of infected mice expressed IP-10. Using wild-type mice and IP-10 gene knockout mice to investigate the role of IP-10 in EV71 infection, we found that IP-10 deficiency significantly reduced levels of Mig in serum, and levels of gamma interferon and the number of CD8 T cells in the mouse brain. Absence of IP-10 significantly increased the mortality of infected mice by 45 %, with slow virus clearance in several vital tissues. Our observations are consistent with a model where EV71 infection boosts IP-10 expression to increase gamma interferon and Mig levels, infiltration of CD8 T cells, virus clearance in tissues and the survival of mice.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 648-648
Author(s):  
Ping Zhang ◽  
Peter Fleming ◽  
Christopher Andoniou ◽  
Jose Paulo Martins ◽  
Alda Saldan ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Interleukin-6 (IL-6) promotes the differentiation of pathogenic T cells and represents a dominant pathway of cytokine-dysregulation and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Cytomegalovirus (CMV) reactivation is a common and life-threatening infectious complication following allogenic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The role of T cell immunity is long-established, and our group recently demonstrated that CMV strain-specific immunoglobulins (Ig) are critical in preventing CMV reactivation in preclinical models (Martins JP et al, Science 2019). Methods and Results: In a phase I/II clinical trial (Kennedy GA et al, Lancet Onc. 2014), we observed unexpectedly low rates of CMV reactivation following IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) blockade with tocilizumab (TCZ) compared to historical control (8/35 vs 20/43, P < 0.05). We used our preclinical models of murine CMV (MCMV) reactivation to pursue the mechanisms. We transplanted bone marrow (BM) and T cells from naïve B6 donors into CMV-latently infected B6D2F1 recipients and monitored MCMV reactivation. Ablation of IL-6R in donor T cells (using B6 CD4 cre x IL-6R fl/fl transgenic mice; IL-6R -/-) significantly reduced MCMV reactivation 5 weeks after BMT, as measured by plasma viremia and infectious viral loads in the liver (Fig 1A). Next, we examined the contribution of donor T and B cells to the suppression of MCMV reactivation by IL-6R inhibition. At 2 - 3 weeks after BMT and prior to MCMV reactivation, cytokine (IFNɣ/TNF) secretion from CD4 + T cells (in response to MCMV infected DC) was not detectable; MCMV m38 tetramer + CD8 T cells were present at very low frequencies (< 0.1% of CD8 T cells) which were not altered by IL-6R ablation. The frequency of CXCR-5 +PD-1 + T FH cells was comparable or lower in IL-6R -/- vs wild-type (WT) T cells after BMT. Transplant of BM from B6.μMT mice (unable to generate mature B cells and plasma cells) did not increase MCMV viremia (Fig 1B), excluding a role for donor B cells. Thus, early MCMV reactivation in the presence of IL-6 is independent of MCMV-specific T cells and donor B cells. To study the effects of IL-6 on recipient-derived humoral immunity we quantified MCMV-specific IgG in plasma after BMT and found that levels were significantly higher in recipients of IL-6R -/- T cells (Fig 1C). Furthermore, MCMV-IgG levels in plasma correlated with MCMV viremia (r = - 0.72, P < 0.0001) and viral loads in liver (r = - 0.68, P < 0.0001). MCMV-IgG2a, which can only be generated by B6D2F1 recipients, was significantly higher in recipients of IL-6R -/- T cells, confirming that differences in humoral responses were of recipient-origin. To define relevant mechanisms, we examined the kinetics of IgG after BMT by monitoring the loss of murine IgG (transferred on day 0) in plasma (Fig 1D). Recipients of IL-6R -/- T cells showed significantly slower loss of IgG than recipients of WT T cells, with or without GVHD prophylaxis with cyclosporine (CSA). Thus, ablation of IL-6 signaling in donor T cells is associated with reduced loss of recipient IgG and protection from MCMV reactivation, an outcome which seems independent of the effects of IL-6 on GVHD. We correlated our findings with data from a recent randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind phase III clinical trial of TCZ administration on Day -1 of BMT (Kennedy GA et al, Blood 2021). TCZ reduced CMV reactivation in at risk seropositive BMT recipients of volunteer unrelated donor grafts regardless of acute GVHD (all at risk recipients, TCZ vs. control: 12/26 vs 21/28, P = 0.03; at risk without grade 2-4 GVHD, TCZ vs control: 6/18 vs 9/13, P = 0.03). TCZ did not alter the frequency of B cells or the frequency and function of HCMV-specific CD8 + T cells, quantified by HCMV-pMHC tetramer-staining and HCMV peptide-specific cytokine (IFNγ/TNF) secretion. In contrast, levels of HCMV-specific IgG at day +30 in HCMV-seropositive recipients were significantly higher in the TCZ versus control group (Fig 1E). Consistent with our preclinical studies, the level of HCMV-IgG significantly and inversely correlated with early HCMV reactivation (within 35 days) after transplant. Conclusion: These data confirm the importance of recipient-derived humoral immunity in controlling early CMV reactivation in clinical BMT recipients. Critically, we demonstrate the ability of IL-6R blockade to maintain protective humoral responses until effective donor-derived adaptive immunity can be generated. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Boeckh: Merck: Consultancy, Research Funding; SymBio Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy; Helocyte: Consultancy; Evrys Bio: Consultancy; Moderna: Consultancy; Gilead: Consultancy, Research Funding; AlloVir: Consultancy; GSK: Consultancy. Hill: Generon corporation: Consultancy; NapaJun Pharma: Consultancy; Compass Therapeutics: Research Funding; Syndax Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Applied Molecular Transport: Research Funding; iTeos Therapeutics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Roche: Research Funding; Neoleukin Therapeutics: Consultancy.


2014 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 421-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Tokarz-Deptuła ◽  
P. Niedźwiedzka-Rystwej ◽  
B. Hukowska-Szematowicz ◽  
M. Adamiak ◽  
A. Trzeciak-Ryczek ◽  
...  

Abstract In Poland, rabbit is a highly valued animal, due to dietetic and flavour values of its meat, but above all, rabbits tend to be commonly used laboratory animals. The aim of the study was developing standards for counts of B-cells with CD19+ receptor, T-cells with CD5+ receptor, and their subpopulations, namely T-cells with CD4+, CD8+ and CD25+ receptor in the peripheral blood of mixed-breed Polish rabbits with addition of blood of meet breeds, including the assessment of the impact of four seasons of the year and animal sex on the values of the immunological parameters determined. The results showed that the counts of B- and T-cells and their subpopulations in peripheral blood remain within the following ranges: for CD19+ B-cells: 1.05 - 3.05%, for CD5+ T-cells: 34.00 - 43.07%, CD4+ T-cells: 23.52 - 33.23%, CD8+ T-cells: 12.55 - 17.30%, whereas for CD25+ T-cells: 0.72 - 2.81%. As it comes to the season of the year, it was observed that it principally affects the values of CD25+ T-cells, while in the case of rabbit sex, more changes were found in females.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 7517-7517
Author(s):  
Joshua W. Keegan ◽  
Frank Borriello ◽  
Stacey M. Fernandes ◽  
Jennifer R. Brown ◽  
James A. Lederer

7517 Background: Alloplex Biotherapeutics has developed a cellular therapeutic that uses ENgineered Leukocyte ImmunoSTimulatory cell lines called ENLIST cells to activate and expand populations of tumor killing effector cells from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). This process leads to a 300-fold expansion of NK cells, CD8+ T cells, NKT cells, and TCRγδ T cells that are called SUPLEXA cells, which will be cryopreserved and transferred back into patients as an autologous immune cell therapy for cancer. In this study, PBMCs from CLL patients were used to generate SUPLEXA cells as a first approach to comparatively profile SUPLEXA cells from cancer patients and normal healthy volunteers (NHVs). Methods: ENLIST cell lines were engineered by expressing curated immunomodulatory proteins in the SK-MEL-2 melanoma cell line. Two million (M) PBMCs from 10 CLL patients or 2 NHVs were incubated with 0.4 M freeze/thaw killed ENLIST cells for 5 days in XVIVO-15 medium with 2% heat-inactivated human AB serum (XAB2) and then split 1:15 in XAB2 containing IL-7 and IL-15 to expand. After 9 days, SUPLEXA cells were harvested and cryopreserved. Results: Original PBMCs and matched SUPLEXA cells from each donor were thawed and characterized by mass cytometry (CyTOF) using a 47-marker antibody panel. CyTOF staining results of PBMCs from CLL patients demonstrated approximately 95% leukemia cells and few T cells, NK cells, B cells, and monocytes. CyTOF staining of SUPLEXA cells from all 10 CLL patients showed expansion of NK cells (17%), CD8 T cells (11%), and CD4 T cells (7.5%) that were similar in phenotype to SUPLEXA cells from NHVs showing high expression of granzymes and perforin that are indicative of potent tumor cell killing activity. Cancer cells in the original CLL PBMC samples were reduced to 0.78%. However, a population of non-T/non-B cells (60% ± 9.5%) was detected in SUPLEXA cells from all CLL patients that require further characterization. Next, SUPLEXA cells from CLL and NHV patients were comparatively tested for tumor cell killing activity at 2:1, 1:1, and 1:2 effector to target cell (MEL-14 melanoma cells expressing RFP) ratios. Percent killing of tumor cells by SUPLEXA cells prepared from CLL patients (77.8% ± 2.6% at 2:1) and NHVs (81.5% ± 0.3% at 2:1) were nearly identical at all effector to target ratios. Conclusions: We demonstrate for the first time that PBMCs from CLL patients can be converted into SUPLEXA cells despite low numbers of normal immune cells at baseline and the known immunologic impairment present in CLL patients. Importantly, SUPLEXA cells derived from CLL patients acquire potent tumor killing activity that is indistinguishable from SUPLEXA cells prepared from NHVs. Taken together, these findings support the feasibility of converting PBMCs from CLL patients with low percentages of NK and T cells into an autologous cellular therapy for cancer.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. e0208187
Author(s):  
Ulrike Strittmatter-Keller ◽  
Caroline Walter ◽  
Celine Rauld ◽  
Nicole Egli ◽  
Camille Regairaz ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
T Cells ◽  
B Cells ◽  

Author(s):  
Sudhir Gupta ◽  
Houfen Su ◽  
Sudhanshu Agrawal

<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> In the trials of corona virus vaccines, detailed analyses of subsets of lymphocytes were not carried out. We present perhaps the most comprehensive immunological analysis of 29 subsets of B and T cells in 2 healthy subjects receiving 2 doses of the Pfizer SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) vaccine. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> Analyses were performed prior to vaccination, 3 weeks following the 1st dose, and 4 weeks following the 2nd dose. Total, naïve (T<sub>N</sub>), and different memory and effector subsets (T<sub>CM</sub>, T<sub>EM</sub>, and T<sub>EMRA</sub>) of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells; SARS-CoV-2 spike protein-specific tetramer+, and cytotoxic CD8+ T; subsets of T follicular cells (T<sub>FH</sub>, T<sub>FH</sub>1, T<sub>FH</sub>2, T<sub>FH</sub>1/T<sub>FH</sub>17, and T<sub>FH</sub>17); B-cell subsets (mature B cells, naive B cells, transitional B cells, marginal zone B cells, class-switched memory B cells, germinal center B cells, and CD21<sup>low</sup> B cells), and plasmablasts; and regulatory lymphocytes (CD4+ Treg, CD8+ Treg, Breg, and T<sub>FR</sub> cells) were evaluated with specific monoclonal antibodies by flow cytometry. <b><i>Results:</i></b> A lack of COVID-19 IgG antibodies after the 1st dose in one of 2 subjects was associated with increased regulatory lymphocytes and decreased plasmablasts. Seroconversion after the 2nd dose in this subject was associated with decreased T<sub>FR</sub> cells and increased plasmablasts. In both subjects, CD4 T<sub>EM</sub> and CD8 T<sub>CM</sub> were markedly increased following the 2nd dose. T<sub>FH</sub>1 and regulatory lymphocytes were increased (except Breg) following the 1st dose. A striking increase in SARS-CoV-2-specific CD8+ T cells was observed following the 2nd dose. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> Our data support the need for 2nd dose of vaccine to induce strong SARS-CoV-2 CD8 T-cell specific response and generation of memory subsets of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Regulatory lymphocytes appear to play a role in the magnitude of response.


Kidney360 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 389-398
Author(s):  
Kenna R. Degner ◽  
Nancy A. Wilson ◽  
Shannon R. Reese ◽  
Sandesh Parajuli ◽  
Fahad Aziz ◽  
...  

BackgroundB cell depletion is a common treatment of antibody-mediated rejection (ABMR). We sought to determine the specific immunopathologic effects of this therapeutic approach in kidney transplantation.MethodsThis was a prospective observational study of recipients of kidney transplants diagnosed with late ABMR (>3 months after transplant). Patients received treatment with pulse steroids, IVIG, and rituximab. Donor-specific HLA antibodies (DSA), kidney allograft pathology, renal function, immune cell phenotypes, and 47 circulating cytokines were assessed at baseline and at 3 months.ResultsWe enrolled 23 patients in this study between April 2015 and March 2019. The majority of patients were male (74%) and white (78%) with an average age of 45.6±13.8 years. ABMR was diagnosed at 6.8±5.9 years (4 months to 25 years) post-transplant. Treatment was associated with a significant decline in circulating HLA class I (P=0.003) and class II DSA (P=0.002) and peritubular capillaritis (ptc; P=0.04) compared to baseline. Serum creatinine, BUN, eGFR, and proteinuria (UPC) remained stable. Circulating B cells were depleted to barely detectable levels (P≤0.001), whereas BAFF (P=0.0001), APRIL (P<0.001), and IL-10 (P=0.02) levels increased significantly post-treatment. Notably, there was a significant rise in circulating CD4+ (P=0.02) and CD8+ T cells (P=0.003). We also noted a significant correlation between circulating cytotoxic CD8+ T cells and BAFF (P=0.05), regulatory T cells and IL-10 (P=0.002), and regulatory T cells and HLA class I DSA (P=0.005).ConclusionsShort-term pulse steroids/IVIG/rituximab therapy was associated with inhibition of ABMR (DSA and ptc), stabilization of kidney function, and increased regulatory B cell and T cell survival cytokines. Additional studies are needed to understand the implications of B cell depletion on the crosstalk between T cells and B cells, and humoral components that regulate ABMR.


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