scholarly journals Chronic LCMV Infection Is Fortified with Versatile Tactics to Suppress Host T Cell Immunity and Establish Viral Persistence

Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 1951
Author(s):  
Caleb J. Studstill ◽  
Bumsuk Hahm

Ever since the immune regulatory strains of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), such as Clone 13, were isolated, LCMV infection of mice has served as a valuable model for the mechanistic study of viral immune suppression and virus persistence. The exhaustion of virus-specific T cells was demonstrated during LCMV infection, and the underlying mechanisms have been extensively investigated using LCMV infection in mouse models. In particular, the mechanism for gradual CD8+ T cell exhaustion at molecular and transcriptional levels has been investigated. These studies revealed crucial roles for inhibitory receptors, surface markers, regulatory cytokines, and transcription factors, including PD-1, PSGL-1, CXCR5, and TOX in the regulation of T cells. However, the action mode for CD4+ T cell suppression is largely unknown. Recently, sphingosine kinase 2 was proven to specifically repress CD4+ T cell proliferation and lead to LCMV persistence. As CD4+ T cell regulation was also known to be important for viral persistence, research to uncover the mechanism for CD4+ T cell repression could help us better understand how viruses launch and prolong their persistence. This review summarizes discoveries derived from the study of LCMV in regard to the mechanisms for T cell suppression and approaches for the termination of viral persistence with special emphasis on CD8+ T cells.

1991 ◽  
Vol 174 (6) ◽  
pp. 1425-1429 ◽  
Author(s):  
W P Fung-Leung ◽  
T M Kündig ◽  
R M Zinkernagel ◽  
T W Mak

The immune response against lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) was studied in a mutant mouse strain that does not possess CD8+ T lymphocytes. Virus-specific cytotoxic T cell activity was generated in spleens of wild-type mice in an acute LCMV infection but was not measurable in mutant mice. Injection of replicating LCMV into footpads of wild-type mice induced a CD8+ T cell-mediated swelling that peaked on day 8, followed by a CD4+ T cell-mediated swelling that peaked on day 11, whereas mutant mice exhibited only the CD4+ T cell-mediated swelling. After intracerebral inoculation with LCMV-Armstrong, all wild-type mice died of classical CD8+ T cell-dependent choriomeningitis in 8-10 days. Mutant mice showed symptoms of general malaise but most of them survived. Mutant mice depleted of CD4+ T cells by monoclonal antibody treatment showed no clinical signs of sickness. On day 9 after intravenous infection with LCMV-WE, virus was detected at high titers in spleens and livers of mutant mice but not in those of wild-type mice. On day 70 after injection of LCMV-WE into footpads, virus was not detected in wild-type mice and in one of the three mutant mice tested, but was still measurable in kidneys of the other two mutant mice. These results confirm in a new animal model that CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity is crucial in LCMV clearance and in the immunopathological disease during LCMV infection. In addition, our results demonstrated a less severe form of choriomeningitis mediated by CD4+ T cells and slow clearance of LCMV by alternative pathways independent of CD8+ T cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie M. Dillon ◽  
Tezha A. Thompson ◽  
Allison J. Christians ◽  
Martin D. McCarter ◽  
Cara C. Wilson

Abstract Background The etiology of the low-level chronic inflammatory state associated with aging is likely multifactorial, but a number of animal and human studies have implicated a functional decline of the gastrointestinal immune system as a potential driver. Gut tissue-resident memory T cells play critical roles in mediating protective immunity and in maintaining gut homeostasis, yet few studies have investigated the effect of aging on human gut T cell immunity. To determine if aging impacted CD4 T cell immunity in the human large intestine, we utilized multi-color flow cytometry to measure colonic lamina propria (LP) CD4 T cell frequencies and immune-modulatory marker expression in younger (mean ± SEM: 38 ± 1.5 yrs) and older (77 ± 1.6 yrs) adults. To determine cellular specificity, we evaluated colon LP CD8 T cell frequency and phenotype in the same donors. To probe tissue specificity, we evaluated the same panel of markers in peripheral blood (PB) CD4 T cells in a separate cohort of similarly aged persons. Results Frequencies of colonic CD4 T cells as a fraction of total LP mononuclear cells were higher in older persons whereas absolute numbers of colonic LP CD4 T cells per gram of tissue were similar in both age groups. LP CD4 T cells from older versus younger persons exhibited reduced CTLA-4, PD-1 and Ki67 expression. Levels of Bcl-2, CD57, CD25 and percentages of activated CD38+HLA-DR+ CD4 T cells were similar in both age groups. In memory PB CD4 T cells, older age was only associated with increased CD57 expression. Significant age effects for LP CD8 T cells were only observed for CTLA-4 expression, with lower levels of expression observed on cells from older adults. Conclusions Greater age was associated with reduced expression of the co-inhibitory receptors CTLA-4 and PD-1 on LP CD4 T cells. Colonic LP CD8 T cells from older persons also displayed reduced CTLA-4 expression. These age-associated profiles were not observed in older PB memory CD4 T cells. The decline in co-inhibitory receptor expression on colonic LP T cells may contribute to local and systemic inflammation via a reduced ability to limit ongoing T cell responses to enteric microbial challenge.


2020 ◽  
Vol 94 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Voic ◽  
Rory D. de Vries ◽  
John Sidney ◽  
Paul Rubiro ◽  
Erin Moore ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Infections with varicella-zoster virus (VZV) are associated with a range of clinical manifestations. Primary infection with VZV causes chicken pox. The virus remains latent in neurons, and it can reactivate later in life, causing herpes zoster (HZ). Two different vaccines have been developed to prevent HZ; one is based on a live attenuated VZV strain (Zostavax), and the other is based on adjuvanted gE recombinant protein (Shingrix). While Zostavax efficacy wanes with age, Shingrix protection retains its efficacy in elderly subjects (individuals 80 years of age and older). In this context, it is of much interest to understand if there is a role for T cell immunity in the differential clinical outcome and if there is a correlate of protection between T cell immunity and Shingrix efficacy. In this study, we characterized the Shingrix-specific ex vivo CD4 T cell responses in the context of natural exposure and HZ vaccination using pools of predicted epitopes. We show that T cell reactivity following natural infection and Zostavax vaccination dominantly targets nonstructural (NS) proteins, while Shingrix vaccination redirects dominant reactivity to target gE. We mapped the gE-specific responses following Shingrix vaccination to 89 different gE epitopes, 34 of which accounted for 80% of the response. Using antigen presentation assays and single HLA molecule-transfected lines, we experimentally determined HLA restrictions for 94 different donor/peptide combinations. Finally, we used our results as a training set to assess strategies to predict restrictions based on measured or predicted HLA binding and the corresponding HLA types of the responding subjects. IMPORTANCE Understanding the T cell profile associated with the protection observed in elderly vaccinees following Shingrix vaccination is relevant to the general definition of correlates of vaccine efficacy. Our study enables these future studies by clarifying the patterns of immunodominance associated with Shingrix vaccination, as opposed to natural infection or Zostavax vaccination. Identification of epitopes recognized by Shingrix-induced CD4 T cells and their associated HLA restrictions enables the generation of tetrameric staining reagents and, more broadly, the capability to characterize the specificity, magnitude, and phenotype of VZV-specific T cells.


2009 ◽  
Vol 182 (10) ◽  
pp. 6121-6128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren W. Collison ◽  
Meenu R. Pillai ◽  
Vandana Chaturvedi ◽  
Dario A. A. Vignali

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 1687
Author(s):  
Magalie Dosset ◽  
Andrea Castro ◽  
Hannah Carter ◽  
Maurizio Zanetti

Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) is a conserved self-tumor antigen which is overexpressed in most tumors and plays a critical role in tumor formation and progression. As such, TERT is an antigen of great relevance to develop widely applicable immunotherapies. CD4 T cells play a major role in the anti-cancer response alone or with other effector cells such as CD8 T cells and NK cells. To date, efforts have been made to identify TERT peptides capable of stimulating CD4 T cells that are also able to bind diverse MHC-II alleles to ease immune status monitoring and immunotherapies. Here, we review the current status of TERT biology, TERT/MHC-II immunobiology, and past and current vaccine clinical trials. We propose that monitoring CD4 T cell immunity against TERT is a simple and direct way to assess immune surveillance in cancer patients and a new way to predict the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPi). Finally, we present the initial results of a systematic discovery of TERT peptides able to bind the most common HLA Class II alleles worldwide and show that the repertoire of MHC-II TERT peptides is wider than currently appreciated.


2003 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Frasca ◽  
C. Scottà ◽  
G. Lombardi ◽  
E. Piccolella

T cell suppression is a well established phenomenon, but the mechanisms involved are still a matter of debate. Mouse anergic T cells were shown to suppress responder T cell activation by inhibiting the antigen presenting function of DC. In the present work we studied the effects of co-culturing human anergic CD4+T cells with autologous dendritic cells (DC) at different stages of maturation. Either DC maturation or survival, depending on whether immature or mature DC where used as APC, was impaired in the presence of anergic cells. Indeed, MHC and costimulatory molecule up-regulation was inhibited in immature DC, whereas apoptotic phenomena were favored in mature DC and consequently in responder T cells. Defective ligation of CD40 by CD40L (CD154) was responsible for CD95-mediated and spontaneous apoptosis of DC as well as for a failure of their maturation process. These findings indicate that lack of activation of CD40 on DC by CD40L-defective anergic cells might be the primary event involved in T cell suppression and support the role of CD40 signaling in regulating both activation and survival of DC.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (10) ◽  
pp. 4928-4940 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maya F. Kotturi ◽  
Bjoern Peters ◽  
Fernando Buendia-Laysa ◽  
John Sidney ◽  
Carla Oseroff ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT CD8+ T-cell responses control lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection in H-2b mice. Although antigen-specific responses against LCMV infection are well studied, we found that a significant fraction of the CD8+ CD44hi T-cell response to LCMV in H-2b mice was not accounted for by known epitopes. We screened peptides predicted to bind major histocompatibility complex class I and overlapping 15-mer peptides spanning the complete LCMV proteome for gamma interferon (IFN-γ) induction from CD8+ T cells derived from LCMV-infected H-2b mice. We identified 19 novel epitopes. Together with the 9 previously known, these epitopes account for the total CD8+ CD44hi response. Thus, bystander T-cell activation does not contribute appreciably to the CD8+ CD44hi pool. Strikingly, 15 of the 19 new epitopes were derived from the viral L polymerase, which, until now, was not recognized as a target of the cellular response induced by LCMV infection. The L epitopes induced significant levels of in vivo cytotoxicity and conferred protection against LCMV challenge. Interestingly, protection from viral challenge was best correlated with the cytolytic potential of CD8+ T cells, whereas IFN-γ production and peptide avidity appear to play a lesser role. Taken together, these findings illustrate that the LCMV-specific CD8+ T-cell response is more complex than previously appreciated.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3483-3483
Author(s):  
Jacopo Mariotti ◽  
Jason Foley ◽  
Kaitlyn Ryan ◽  
Nicole Buxhoeveden ◽  
Daniel Fowler

Abstract Although fludarabine and pentostatin are variably utilized for conditioning prior to clinical allogeneic transplantation, limited data exists with respect to their relative efficacy in terms of host immune T cell depletion and T cell suppression. To directly compare these agents in vivo in a murine model, we compared a regimen of fludarabine plus cyclophosphamide (FC) similar to one that we previously developed (Petrus et al, BBMT, 2000) to a new regimen of pentostatin plus cyclophosphamide (PC). Cohorts of mice (n=5–10) received a three-day regimen consisting of P alone (1 mg/kg/d), F alone (100 mg/kg/d), C alone (50 mg/kg/d), or combination PC or FC. Similar to our previous data, administration of P, F, or C alone yielded minimal host T cell depletion (as measured by enumeration of splenic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells) and minimal T cell suppression (as determined by CD3, CD28 co-stimulation of a constant number of remaining splenic T cells and measuring resultant cytokine secretion by multi-analyte assay). The PC and FC regimens were similar in terms of myeloid suppression (p=.2). However, the PC regimen was more potent in terms of depleting host CD4+ T cells (remaining host CD4 number [× 10^6/spleen], 2.1±0.3 [PC] vs. 4.4±0.6 [FC], p<0.01) and CD8+ T cells (remaining host CD8 number, 1.7±0.2 [PC] vs. 2.4±0.5 [FC], p<0.01). Moreover, the PC regimen yielded greater T cell immune suppression than the FC regimen (cytokine values are pg/ml/0.5×10^6 cells/ml; all comparisons p<0.05) with respect to capacity to secrete IFN-γ (13±5 [PC] vs. 48±12 [FC]), IL-2 (59±44 [PC] vs. 258±32 [FC]), IL-4 (34±10 [PC] vs. 104±12 [FC]), and IL-10 (15±3 [PC] vs. 34±5 [FC]). In light of this differential in both immune T cell depletion and suppression of T cell effector function, we hypothesized that T cells from PC-treated recipients would have reduced capacity to mediate a host-versus-graft rejection response (HVGR) relative to FC-treated recipients. To directly test this hypothesis, we utilized a host T cell add-back model of rejection whereby BALB/c hosts were lethally irradiated (1050 cGy; day -2), reconstituted with host-type T cells from PC- or FC-treated recipients (day -1; 0.1 × 10^6 T cells transferred), and finally challenged with fully MHC-disparate transplantation (B6 donor bone marrow cells, 10 × 10^6 cells; day 0). In vivo HVGR was quantified by the following method at day 7 post-BMT: harvest of splenic T cells, stimulation with host- or donor-type dendritic cells, and use of six-color flow cytometry to detect host T cells, CD4 and CD8 subsets, and cytokine secretion by capture method. Consistent with our hypothesis, PC-treated cells acquired greatly reduced alloreactivity in vivo relative to FC-treated cells: the percentage of host CD4+ T cells secreting IFN-γ in an allospecific manner was 2.3±0.8% in recipients of PC-treated T cells and 62.7±13.4% in recipients of FC-treated cells (p<0.001). Similarly, the percentage of host CD8+ T cells secreting IFN-γ in an allospecific manner was 8.6±2.8% in recipients of PC-treated T cells and 92.7±4.1% in recipients of FC-treated T cells (p<0.001). We therefore conclude that at similar levels of myeloid suppression, the PC regimen is superior to the FC regimen in terms of murine T cell depletion, suppression of global T cell cytokine secretion, and inhibition of in vivo capacity to acquire allospecificity in response to fully genetically disparate marrow allografts. These data provide a rationale to develop PC regimens as an alternative to currently utilized FC regimens.


2011 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. 3529-3541 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eda P. Tenorio ◽  
Jacquelina Fernández ◽  
Carlos Castellanos ◽  
Jonadab E. Olguín ◽  
Rafael Saavedra

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