Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
J Virol. 2014 Feb;88(3):1636-51. doi: 10.1128/JVI.02851-13. Epub 2013 Nov 20.
One question that continues to challenge influenza A research is why some strains of virus are so devastating compared to their more mild counterparts. We approached this question from an immunological perspective, investigating the CD8(+) T cell response in a mouse model system comparing high- and low-pathological influenza virus infections. Our findings reveal that the early (day 0 to 5) viral titer was not the determining factor in the outcome of disease. Instead, increased numbers of antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells and elevated effector function on a per-cell basis were found in the low-pathological infection and correlated with reduced illness and later-time-point (day 6 to 10) viral titer. High-pathological infection was associated with increased PD-1 expression on influenza virus-specific CD8(+) T cells, and blockade of PD-L1 in vivo led to reduced virus titers and increased CD8(+) T cell numbers in high- but not low-pathological infection, though T cell functionality was not restored. These data show that high-pathological acute influenza virus infection is associated with a dysregulated CD8(+) T cell response, which is likely caused by the more highly inflamed airway microenvironment during the early days of infection. Therapeutic approaches specifically aimed at modulating innate airway inflammation may therefore promote efficient CD8(+) T cell activity. We show that during a severe influenza virus infection, one type of immune cell, the CD8 T cell, is less abundant and less functional than in a more mild infection. This dysregulated T cell phenotype correlates with a lower rate of virus clearance in the severe infection and is partially regulated by the expression of a suppressive coreceptor called PD-1. Treatment with an antibody that blocks PD-1 improves T cell functionality and increases virus clearance.
一个持续困扰甲型流感病毒研究的问题是,为什么有些病毒株比其他更温和的病毒株具有更强的破坏性。我们从免疫学角度探讨了这个问题,在比较高致病性和低致病性流感病毒感染的小鼠模型系统中,研究了 CD8(+) T 细胞反应。我们的研究结果表明,早期(第 0 天至第 5 天)病毒滴度并不是疾病结局的决定因素。相反,在低致病性感染中发现了更多数量的抗原特异性 CD8(+) T 细胞和基于每个细胞的更高效应功能,与疾病减轻和晚期(第 6 天至第 10 天)病毒滴度降低相关。高致病性感染与流感病毒特异性 CD8(+) T 细胞上 PD-1 表达增加相关,体内阻断 PD-L1 导致高致病性感染中病毒滴度降低和 CD8(+) T 细胞数量增加,但 T 细胞功能未恢复。这些数据表明,高致病性急性流感病毒感染与失调的 CD8(+) T 细胞反应相关,这可能是由感染早期更高度炎症的气道微环境引起的。因此,专门针对调节固有气道炎症的治疗方法可能会促进有效的 CD8(+) T 细胞活性。我们发现,在严重的流感病毒感染中,一种免疫细胞,即 CD8 T 细胞,比在更温和的感染中更为稀少且功能更差。这种失调的 T 细胞表型与严重感染中病毒清除率降低相关,部分由一种称为 PD-1 的抑制性共受体表达调控。阻断 PD-1 的抗体治疗可改善 T 细胞功能并增加病毒清除。