Circulating herpes simplex type 1 (HSV-1)-specific CD8+T cells do not access HSV-1 latently infected trigeminal ganglia

Herpesviridae - Tập 2 - Trang 1-10 - 2011
Susanne Himmelein1, Anthony J St Leger2,3, Jared E Knickelbein2, Alexander Rowe2, Michael L Freeman4, Robert L Hendricks2,3,5
1Department of Neurology, Klinikum Grosshadern, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany
2Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, USA
3Department of Immunology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, USA
4Trudeau Institute, Saranac Lake, USA
5Department of Molecular Genetics & Biochemistry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA

Tóm tắt

Therapeutic vaccines can be designed to enhance existing T cell memory populations for increased protection against re-infection. In the case of herpes simplex virus type 1, recurrent disease results from reactivation of latent virus in sensory ganglia, which is controlled in part by a ganglia-resident HSV-specific memory CD8+ T cell population. Thus, an important goal of a therapeutic HSV-1 vaccine would be to enhance this population. HSV-1-infected mice were treated with TAK-779 to block CCR5- and CXCR3-mediated CD8+ T cell migration during both acute and latent infections. Additionally, HSV-1-specific CD8+ T cells were transferred into HSV-1 latently infected mice to mimic the effect of a therapeutic vaccine, and their migration into trigeminal ganglia (TG) was traced during steady-state latency, or during recovery of the TG-resident memory CD8+ T cell population following stress-, and corticosterone-induced depletion and HSV-1 reactivation from latency. Bromodeoxy uridine (BrdU) incorporation measured cell proliferation in vivo. TAK-779 treatment during acute HSV-1 infection reduced the number of infiltrating CD8+ T cells but did not alter the number of viral genome copies. TAK-779 treatment during HSV latency did not affect the size of the TG-resident memory CD8+ T cell population. Transferred HSV-specific CD8+ T cells failed to access latently infected TG during steady-state latency, or during recovery of the TG resident HSV-specific CD8+ T cell population following exposure of latently infected mice to stress and corticosterone. Recovery of the HSV-specific CD8+ T cell population after stress and corticosterone treatment occurred with homeostatic levels of cell division and did not require CD4+ T cell help. Our findings are consistent with the notion that the CD8+ T cells in latently infected TG are a tissue-resident memory (Trm) population that is maintained without replenishment from the periphery, and that when this population is disrupted, it recovers without proliferation or detectable recruitment of HSV-specific CD8+ T cells from the blood. The compartmentalization of the HSV-specific CD8+ memory T cell population in latently infected TG will complicate the design of therapeutic vaccines.

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