Porichis Filippos, Hart Meghan G, Zupkosky Jennifer, Barblu Lucie, Kaufmann Daniel E
The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard.
J Vis Exp. 2013 Oct 15(80):e50821. doi: 10.3791/50821.
T cell exhaustion is a major factor in failed pathogen clearance during chronic viral infections. Immunoregulatory pathways, such as PD-1 and IL-10, are upregulated upon this ongoing antigen exposure and contribute to loss of proliferation, reduced cytolytic function, and impaired cytokine production by CD4 and CD8 T cells. In the murine model of LCMV infection, administration of blocking antibodies against these two pathways augmented T cell responses. However, there is currently no in vitro assay to measure the impact of such blockade on cytokine secretion in cells from human samples. Our protocol and experimental approach enable us to accurately and efficiently quantify the restoration of cytokine production by HIV-specific CD4 T cells from HIV infected subjects. Here, we depict an in vitro experimental design that enables measurements of cytokine secretion by HIV-specific CD4 T cells and their impact on other cell subsets. CD8 T cells were depleted from whole blood and remaining PBMCs were isolated via Ficoll separation method. CD8-depleted PBMCs were then incubated with blocking antibodies against PD-L1 and/or IL-10Rα and, after stimulation with an HIV-1 Gag peptide pool, cells were incubated at 37 °C, 5% CO2. After 48 hr, supernatant was collected for cytokine analysis by beads arrays and cell pellets were collected for either phenotypic analysis using flow cytometry or transcriptional analysis using qRT-PCR. For more detailed analysis, different cell populations were obtained by selective subset depletion from PBMCs or by sorting using flow cytometry before being assessed in the same assays. These methods provide a highly sensitive and specific approach to determine the modulation of cytokine production by antigen-specific T-helper cells and to determine functional interactions between different populations of immune cells.
T细胞耗竭是慢性病毒感染期间病原体清除失败的一个主要因素。免疫调节途径,如程序性死亡受体1(PD-1)和白细胞介素10(IL-10),在持续的抗原暴露时会上调,并导致CD4和CD8 T细胞增殖能力丧失、细胞溶解功能降低以及细胞因子产生受损。在淋巴细胞性脉络丛脑膜炎病毒(LCMV)感染的小鼠模型中,给予针对这两种途径的阻断抗体可增强T细胞反应。然而,目前尚无体外试验来测量这种阻断对人类样本细胞中细胞因子分泌的影响。我们的方案和实验方法使我们能够准确且高效地量化来自HIV感染受试者的HIV特异性CD4 T细胞中细胞因子产生的恢复情况。在此,我们描述了一种体外实验设计,该设计能够测量HIV特异性CD4 T细胞的细胞因子分泌及其对其他细胞亚群的影响。从全血中去除CD8 T细胞,然后通过Ficoll分离法分离剩余的外周血单核细胞(PBMC)。然后将去除CD8的PBMC与抗程序性死亡配体1(PD-L1)和/或白细胞介素10受体α(IL-10Rα)阻断抗体一起孵育,在用HIV-1 gag肽库刺激后,将细胞在37℃、5%二氧化碳条件下孵育。48小时后,收集上清液用于通过磁珠阵列进行细胞因子分析,收集细胞沉淀用于通过流式细胞术进行表型分析或通过实时定量聚合酶链反应(qRT-PCR)进行转录分析。为了进行更详细的分析,在相同试验中评估之前,通过从PBMC中选择性去除亚群或通过流式细胞术分选获得不同的细胞群体。这些方法提供了一种高度灵敏且特异的方法,用于确定抗原特异性辅助性T细胞对细胞因子产生的调节作用,并确定不同免疫细胞群体之间的功能相互作用。