Lai X, Shen Y, Zhou D, Sehgal P, Shen L, Simon M, Qiu L, Letvin N L, Chen Z W
Tuberculosis Research Unit, Beth Israel Deaconess, Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Clin Exp Immunol. 2003 Aug;133(2):182-92. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.2003.02209.x.
Immune responses of lymphocyte populations during early phases of mycobacterial infection and reinfection have not been well characterized in humans. A non-human primate model of Mycobacterium bovis bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) infection was employed to characterize optimally the immune responses of mycobacteria-specific T cells. Primary BCG infection induced biphasic immune responses, characterized by initial lymphocytopenia and subsequent expansion of CD4+, CD8+ and gammadelta T cell populations in the blood, lymph nodes and the pulmonary compartment. The potency of detectable T cell immune responses appears to be influenced by the timing and route of infection as well as challenge doses of BCG organisms. Systemic BCG infection introduced by intravenous challenge induced a dose-dependent expansion of circulating CD4+, CD8+ and gammadelta T cells whereas, in the pulmonary compartment, the systemic infection resulted in a predominant increase in numbers of gammadelta T cells. In contrast, pulmonary exposure to BCG through the bronchial route induced detectable expansions of CD4+, CD8+ and gammadelta T cell populations in only the lung but not in the blood. A rapid recall expansion of these T cell populations was seen in the macaques reinfected intravenously and bronchially with BCG. The expanded alphabeta and gammadelta T cell populations exhibited their antigen specificity for mycobacterial peptides and non-peptide phospholigands, respectively. Finally, the major expansion of T cells was associated with a resolution of active BCG infection and reinfection. The patterns and kinetics of CD4+, CD8+ and gammadelta T cell immune responses during BCG infection might contribute to characterizing immune protection against tuberculosis and testing new tuberculosis vaccines in primates.
在人类中,分枝杆菌感染和再感染早期阶段淋巴细胞群体的免疫反应尚未得到充分表征。采用牛分枝杆菌卡介苗(BCG)感染的非人灵长类动物模型来最佳地表征分枝杆菌特异性T细胞的免疫反应。原发性BCG感染诱导双相免疫反应,其特征为最初的淋巴细胞减少以及随后血液、淋巴结和肺区室中CD4 +、CD8 +和γδ T细胞群体的扩增。可检测到的T细胞免疫反应的效力似乎受感染时间、感染途径以及BCG生物体攻击剂量的影响。静脉内攻击引入的全身性BCG感染诱导循环CD4 +、CD8 +和γδ T细胞的剂量依赖性扩增,而在肺区室中,全身性感染导致γδ T细胞数量主要增加。相比之下,通过支气管途径肺部暴露于BCG仅在肺中诱导可检测到的CD4 +、CD8 +和γδ T细胞群体扩增,而在血液中未诱导。在用BCG静脉内和支气管内再感染的猕猴中观察到这些T细胞群体的快速回忆扩增。扩增的αβ和γδ T细胞群体分别对分枝杆菌肽和非肽磷配体表现出抗原特异性。最后,T细胞的主要扩增与活动性BCG感染和再感染的消退相关。BCG感染期间CD4 +、CD8 +和γδ T细胞免疫反应的模式和动力学可能有助于表征针对结核病的免疫保护以及在灵长类动物中测试新型结核病疫苗。