Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2011 Nov;7(11):e1002381. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002381. Epub 2011 Nov 10.
In mouse models of influenza, T cells can confer broad protection against multiple viral subtypes when antibodies raised against a single subtype fail to do so. However, the role of T cells in protecting humans against influenza remains unclear. Here we employ a translational nonhuman primate model to show that cross-reactive T cell responses play an important role in early clearance of infection with 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus (H1N1pdm). To "prime" cellular immunity, we first infected 5 rhesus macaques with a seasonal human H1N1 isolate. These animals made detectable cellular and antibody responses against the seasonal H1N1 isolate but had no neutralizing antibodies against H1N1pdm. Four months later, we challenged the 5 "primed" animals and 7 naive controls with H1N1pdm. In naive animals, CD8+ T cells with an activated phenotype (Ki-67+ CD38+) appeared in blood and lung 5-7 days post inoculation (p.i.) with H1N1pdm and reached peak magnitude 7-10 days p.i. In contrast, activated T cells were recruited to the lung as early as 2 days p.i. in "primed" animals, and reached peak frequencies in blood and lung 4-7 days p.i. Interferon (IFN)-γ Elispot and intracellular cytokine staining assays showed that the virus-specific response peaked earlier and reached a higher magnitude in "primed" animals than in naive animals. This response involved both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Strikingly, "primed" animals cleared H1N1pdm infection significantly earlier from the upper and lower respiratory tract than the naive animals did, and before the appearance of H1N1pdm-specific neutralizing antibodies. Together, our results suggest that cross-reactive T cell responses can mediate early clearance of an antigenically novel influenza virus in primates. Vaccines capable of inducing such cross-reactive T cells may help protect humans against severe disease caused by newly emerging pandemic influenza viruses.
在流感的小鼠模型中,当针对单一亚型的抗体未能发挥作用时,T 细胞可以提供针对多种病毒亚型的广泛保护。然而,T 细胞在保护人类免受流感方面的作用仍不清楚。在这里,我们采用转化的非人类灵长类动物模型表明,交叉反应性 T 细胞反应在清除 2009 年大流行 H1N1 流感病毒(H1N1pdm)感染方面起着重要作用。为了“启动”细胞免疫,我们首先用季节性 H1N1 分离株感染 5 只恒河猴。这些动物对季节性 H1N1 分离株产生了可检测的细胞和抗体反应,但对 H1N1pdm 没有中和抗体。四个月后,我们用 H1N1pdm 挑战 5 只“接种”动物和 7 只未接种动物。在未接种动物中,具有激活表型(Ki-67+CD38+)的 CD8+T 细胞在接种 H1N1pdm 后 5-7 天出现在血液和肺部,并在 7-10 天达到峰值。相比之下,在“接种”动物中,激活的 T 细胞早在接种后 2 天就被募集到肺部,并且在血液和肺部中达到 4-7 天的峰值频率。干扰素(IFN)-γ Elispot 和细胞内细胞因子染色分析表明,病毒特异性反应在“接种”动物中比在未接种动物中更早达到峰值,并且达到更高的幅度。这种反应涉及 CD4+和 CD8+T 细胞。引人注目的是,“接种”动物从上呼吸道和下呼吸道中清除 H1N1pdm 感染的速度明显快于未接种动物,并且在出现 H1N1pdm 特异性中和抗体之前。总之,我们的结果表明,交叉反应性 T 细胞反应可以介导灵长类动物中新型流感病毒的早期清除。能够诱导这种交叉反应性 T 细胞的疫苗可能有助于保护人类免受新出现的大流行性流感病毒引起的严重疾病。
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011-1-3
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