scholarly journals Correction: PD-1 Upregulated on Regulatory T Cells during Chronic Virus Infection Enhances the Suppression of CD8+ T Cell Immune Response via the Interaction with PD-L1 Expressed on CD8+ T Cells

2015 ◽  
Vol 195 (12) ◽  
pp. 5841-5842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo Jin Park ◽  
Joon Seok Park ◽  
Yun Hee Jeong ◽  
Jimin Son ◽  
Young Ho Ban ◽  
...  
Metabolites ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 461
Author(s):  
Jenifer Sanchez ◽  
Ian Jackson ◽  
Katie R. Flaherty ◽  
Tamara Muliaditan ◽  
Anna Schurich

Upon activation T cells engage glucose metabolism to fuel the costly effector functions needed for a robust immune response. Consequently, the availability of glucose can impact on T cell function. The glucose concentrations used in conventional culture media and common metabolic assays are often artificially high, representing hyperglycaemic levels rarely present in vivo. We show here that reducing glucose concentration to physiological levels in culture differentially impacted on virus-specific compared to generically activated human CD8 T cell responses. In virus-specific T cells, limiting glucose availability significantly reduced the frequency of effector-cytokine producing T cells, but promoted the upregulation of CD69 and CD103 associated with an increased capacity for tissue retention. In contrast the functionality of generically activated T cells was largely unaffected and these showed reduced differentiation towards a residency phenotype. Furthermore, T cells being cultured at physiological glucose concentrations were more susceptible to viral infection. This setting resulted in significantly improved lentiviral transduction rates of primary cells. Our data suggest that CD8 T cells are exquisitely adapted to their niche and provide a reminder of the need to better mimic physiological conditions to study the complex nature of the human CD8 T cell immune response.


1999 ◽  
Vol 189 (10) ◽  
pp. 1631-1638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo Lefrançois ◽  
Christina M. Parker ◽  
Sara Olson ◽  
Werner Muller ◽  
Norbert Wagner ◽  
...  

The requirement of β7 integrins for lymphocyte migration was examined during an ongoing immune response in vivo. Transgenic mice (OT-I) expressing an ovalbumin-specific major histocompatibility complex class I–restricted T cell receptor for antigen were rendered deficient in expression of all β7 integrins or only the αEβ7 integrin. To quantitate the relative use of β7 integrins in migration in vivo, equal numbers of OT-I and OT-I-β7−/− or OT-I-αE−/− lymph node (LN) cells were adoptively transferred to normal mice. Although OT-I-β7−/− LN cells migrated to mesenteric LN and peripheral LN as well as wild-type cells, β7 integrins were required for naive CD8 T cell and B cell migration to Peyer's patch. After infection with a recombinant virus (vesicular stomatitis virus) encoding ovalbumin, β7 integrins became critical for migration of activated CD8 T cells to the mesenteric LN and Peyer's patch. Naive CD8 T cells did not enter the lamina propria or the intestinal epithelium, and the majority of migration of activated CD8 T cells to the small and large intestinal mucosa, including the epithelium, was β7 integrin–mediated. The αEβ7 integrin appeared to play no role in migration during a primary CD8 T cell immune response in vivo. Furthermore, despite dramatic upregulation of αEβ7 by CD8 T cells after entry into the epithelium, long-term retention of intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes was also αEβ7 independent.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 284-284
Author(s):  
Yuhong Chen ◽  
Yongwei Zheng ◽  
Xiaona You ◽  
Gang Xin ◽  
Mei Yu ◽  
...  

Abstract Small GTPases regulate multiple signaling pathways and individual Ras member can have distinct biological function. To overcome embryonic lethality of Kras-deficient mice, we generated and examined mice with hematopoietic- and T cell-specific deletion of Kras. In VavCreKrasfl/fl mice with hematopoietic deletion of Kras, thymic T-cell development was normal based on the presence of normal populations of total, CD4- CD8-, CD4+ CD8+, CD4+ and CD8+ thymocytes. The populations of splenic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were also comparable between VavCreKrasfl/fl relative to control mice. In addition, no consistent defects in the 3 H-thymidine incorporation rate of Kras-deficient splenic CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in response to anti-CD3 or anti-CD3 plus IL-2 was detected. Nonetheless, we studied the effect of Kras deficiency on CD8 T-cell immune response to acute infection of the Armstrong strain of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Sub-lethally irradiated Rag1-deficient mice transplanted with bone marrow (BM) cells from VavCreKrasfl/fl or control mice were subjected to LCMV infection. Infection-induced expansion of CD8 T cells and generation of LCMV epitope gp33-specific CD8 T cells were markedly reduced in the recipients that received the BM from VavCreKrasfl/fl relative to control mice. Following in vitro stimulation with the LCMV epitope gp33, the induction of IFNg-expressing CD8 T cells from LCMV-infected recipients that received the BM from VavCreKrasfl/fl mice was dramatically reduced. Further, BM chimeric mice with CD8 T cell-specific deficiency generated by transplantation of lethally irradiated CD8 T cell-depleted CD45.1 congenic mice with a mixture of BM cells from VavCreKrasfl/fl mice and BM cells from CD8 T cell-deficient mice exhibited an impaired CD8 T-cell immune response to LCMV infection. Lastly, we examined the role of Kras in TCR signaling. The level of total TCR-activated Ras (Ras-GTP) was markedly reduced in Kras-deficient relative to control CD8 T cells. Importantly, TCR-induced ERK1/2 activation was impaired in Kras-deficient relative to control CD8 T cells. Consistently, TCR-induced activation of Raf-1 and MEK1/2 was markedly reduced in mutant CD8 T cells. However, TCR-induced JNK and p38 activation as well as Ca2+ flux were normal in Kras-deficient CD8 T cells. Of note, TCR-induced activation of Ca2+ flux, JNK and p38 as well as ERK1/2, MEK1/2 and Raf1 was normal in Kras-deficient relative to control CD4 cells. Taken together, these data demonstrate that Kras is dispensable for T cell development or TCR-induced proliferation of CD4 or CD8 T cells in vitro, but regulates TCR-induced activation of the Raf-1/MEK/ERK pathway in CD8 but not CD4 T cells and intrinsically controls CD8 T-cell immune response to viral infection. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2623-2623 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bindu Varghese ◽  
Behnaz Taidi ◽  
Adam Widman ◽  
James Do ◽  
R. Levy

Abstract Introduction: Anti-idiotype antibodies against B cell lymphoma have shown remarkable success in causing tumor regression in the clinic. In addition to their known ability to mediate ADCC, anti-idiotype antibodies have also been shown to directly inhibit the proliferation of tumor cells by sending negative growth signals via the target idiotype. However, further studies to investigate this mechanism have been hindered by the failure of patient tumor cells to grow ex vivo. Methods and Results: In order to study this phenomenon further, we developed an antibody against the idiotype on an A20 mouse B lymphoma cell line. A radioactive thymidine incorporation assay showed decreased A20 cell proliferation in the presence of the anti-id antibody ex vivo. In vivo, when mice were treated intraperitoneally (i.p.) with 100 μg of antibody 3 hours post-tumor inoculation (1×106 A20 subcutaneously (s.c.)), tumor growth was delayed for greater than 40 days after which the tumor began to grow once again. Further analysis of these escaping tumor cells by flow cytometry showed that that the tumor cells escaped the antibody-mediated immune response by down-regulating expression of idiotype and IgG on their surfaces although the cells retained idiotype expression intracellularly. This down-regulation of surface idiotype rendered the tumor cells resistant to both ADCC and signaling-induced cell death. The addition of an immunostimulatory bacterial mimic (CpG-DNA; 100 μg × 5 intratumoral (i.t.) injections; Days 2, 3 4, 6 & 8) to antibody therapy (Day 0; 100 μg i.p.) cured large established tumors (Day 0 = 1 cm2) and prevented the occurrence of tumor escapees (p<0.0001). Antibody plus CpG combination therapy in tumor-bearing mice deficient for CD8+ T cells demonstrated the critical role of CD8+ T cells in A20 tumor eradication (p<0.005). Depletion of CD4+ T cells was found to have no significant impact on the therapy. We also found that when mice were inoculated with two tumors and treated with anti-idiotype antibody (i.p.) followed by intratumoral CpG in just one tumor (Day 0=1 cm2; anti-idiotype antibody 100 μg Day 0; 100 μg CpG Days 2, 3, 4, 6 & 8), untreated tumors regressed just as well as CpG-treated tumors indicating a systemic anti-tumor immune response was generated. Conclusion: Anti-idiotype therapy, although effective in delaying tumor growth, frequently generates antigen-loss variants. However, we found that when anti-idiotype antibodies were combined with CpG, even large established tumors were cured due to systemic CD8+ T cell-dependent tumor immunity. Rather than simply mediating ADCC against a single tumor antigen, which requires the constant infusion of antibody to hamper tumor growth, we hypothesize a cytotoxic T-cell response against many tumor antigens was also generated. Such a diverse T-cell repertoire can prevent the emergence of tumor escapees and collectively provide long-lasting tumor protection. These pre-clinical results suggest that anti-tumor antibodies combined with CpG warrant further study in patients with B cell lymphoma.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3159-3159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Giannopoulos ◽  
Malgorzata Kowal ◽  
Anna Dmoszynska ◽  
Jacek Rolinski ◽  
Kamila Mazurek ◽  
...  

Abstract There is an accumulation of in vivo (graft-versus-leukemia effect) and in vitro (spontaneous remissions after infections) data providing evidence that CLL might be effectively targeted by T-cell based immunotherapy. Earlier, we characterized the receptor for hyaluronic acid mediated motility (RHAMM) as antigen associated with proliferation and negative prognosis in CLL. We also demonstrated that RHAMM-derived epitope(R3)- primed T cells were able to lyse RHAMM+ target CLL cells. Therefore, we initiated a small phase I/II clinical trial with R3 peptide vaccination for patients with CLL. Six CLL patients in Binet stage 0 of the disease were vaccinated four times at a biweekly interval with HLA-A2 restricted RHAMM-derived epitope R3 (ILSLELMKL, 300μg/dose on day 3) emulsified in incomplete Freund’s adjuvant (IFA) with concomitant administration of GM-CSF (100μg/dose, days 1–5). R3-specific T-cell responses were assessed by tetramer staining and ELISPOT assays. T-cell subsets which play a role in regulation of immune responses including CD3+CD4+CD25hiCD127loFOXP3+ T regs, Th17, CD8+CD137+, CD8+CD103+ and IL-17 producing CD8+ T cells (CD8+IL-17+) were evaluated by flow cytometry. No severe adverse events greater than CTC Io skin toxicity could be observed. Four of six patients showed a reduction of WBC during vaccination. Although these WBC changes did not meet the NCI response criteria, we described these favorable hematological changes achieved in short period of immunotherapy as hematological improvement (defined as at least 20% reduction of WBC during vaccination). The immune responses were found in 5/6 patients as assessed by tetramer-staining (positive response defined as an increase of R3-specific CD8+ T cell frequency by more than 100% after vaccination) and confirmed in 4/5 as assessed by ELISPOT assay. Patients included in this study showed median Tregs frequency of 4.2%, range: 2.5–8%. There was no significant difference of Tregs percentages between patients who improved clinically when compared with non-responders (median 6.1% vs. 3.7%). Vaccination induced Tregs in 4 patients (2 non-responders and 2 responders). Two other patients who improved hematologically did not significantly change frequency of Tregs or even reduced it during vaccination (Figure 1). Median expression of CD103 on CD8+ T cells was 1.84%, range: 0.41–5.63%. In one non-responder, we observed an increase in frequency of CD103+CD8+ T-cells during vaccination from 1.46% to 2.56%. During vaccination, changes in CD8+CD103+ T cell subset did not correlate with the frequency of Tregs, nonetheless we could find an inverse correlation with inflammatory Th17 T cells (r2=−0.5, p<0.05). We could find a correlation between the frequency of Tregs and activated CD8+CD69+ T cells (r2=0.51, p<0.05). Interestingly, CD8+CD137+ cells correlated with CD8+IL-17+ T cells (r2=0.54, p<0.05). In conclusion, peptide vaccination in CLL patients is safe and feasible to mount immune responses against the tumor antigen RHAMM. Most of patients benefited hematologically from vaccination. Although in some patients we observed an induction of tumor-specific T cells without induction of Tregs there is a rationale to add novel active agents against Tregs in future vaccination trials. Figure 1. Peptide vaccination induced changes in WBC, percentages of regulatory T cells (Tregs) as well as R3 specific tetramer ‘CD’ T cells (tetra) of A CLL patients. Patients B, C, E and F improved hematologically during vaccination. Figure 1. Peptide vaccination induced changes in WBC, percentages of regulatory T cells (Tregs) as well as R3 specific tetramer ‘CD’ T cells (tetra) of A CLL patients. Patients B, C, E and F improved hematologically during vaccination.


2008 ◽  
Vol 205 (3) ◽  
pp. 669-684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew G. Evans ◽  
Janice M. Moser ◽  
Laurie T. Krug ◽  
Veranika Pozharskaya ◽  
Ana L. Mora ◽  
...  

Little is known about herpesvirus modulation of T cell activation in latently infected individuals or the implications of such for chronic immune disorders. Murine gammaherpesvirus 68 (MHV68) elicits persistent activation of CD8+ T cells bearing a Vβ4+ T cell receptor (TCR) by a completely unknown mechanism. We show that a novel MHV68 protein encoded by the M1 gene is responsible for Vβ4+ CD8+ T cell stimulation in a manner reminiscent of a viral superantigen. During infection, M1 expression induces a Vβ4+ effector T cell response that resists functional exhaustion and appears to suppress virus reactivation from peritoneal cells by means of long-term interferon-γ (IFNγ) production. Mice lacking an IFNγ receptor (IFNγR−/−) fail to control MHV68 replication, and Vβ4+ and CD8+ T cell activation by M1 instead contributes to severe inflammation and multiorgan fibrotic disease. Thus, M1 manipulates the host CD8+ T cell response in a manner that facilitates latent infection in an immunocompetent setting, but promotes disease during a dysregulated immune response. Identification of a viral pathogenecity determinant with superantigen-like activity for CD8+ T cells broadens the known repertoire of viral immunomodulatory molecules, and its function illustrates the delicate balance achieved between persistent viruses and the host immune response.


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