Institute of Virology, University of Duisburg-Essen, University Hospital, Essen, Germany.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China.
J Virol. 2014 Oct;88(19):11080-90. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01590-14. Epub 2014 Jul 9.
CD8+ T cells are an essential component of successful adaptive immune responses against hepatitis C virus (HCV). A major obstacle to vaccine design against HCV is its inherent viral sequence diversity. Here, we test the hypothesis that different sequence variants of an immunodominant CD8+ T cell epitope, all binding with high affinity to HLA class I, target different T cell receptor repertoires and thereby influence the quality of the CD8+ T cell response. The impacts of sequence differences in the HLA-A02-restricted HCV NS31406-1415 epitope on in vitro priming of naive CD8+ T cells from seronegative donors and cross-reactivity of primed T cells with other epitope variants were characterized. Although the six epitope variants tested were all high-affinity binders to HLA-A02:01, substantial differences in priming and cross-reactivity of CD8+ T cells were observed. The variant associated with the most reproducible priming and induction of T cells with broad cross-reactivity was a genotype 1b variant (KLSALGLNAV) that is more common in HCV isolates collected in Asia but is rare in sequences from Europe and North America. The superior immunogenicity and cross-reactivity of this relatively rare epitope variant were confirmed by using HCV-specific memory CD8+ T cells from people who inject drugs, who are frequently exposed to HCV. Collectively, the data suggest that sequence differences at the epitope level between HCV isolates substantially impact CD8+ T cell priming and the degree of cross-reactivity with other epitope variants.
The results have important implications for vaccine design against highly variable pathogens and suggest that evidence-based selection of the vaccine antigen sequence may improve immunogenicity and T cell cross-reactivity. Cross-reactive CD8+ T cells are likely beneficial for immune control of transmitted viruses carrying epitope variants and for prevention of immune escape during acute infection. To this end, rare epitope variants and potentially even altered epitope sequences associated with priming of broadly cross-reactive T cell receptors should be considered for vaccine design and need further testing.
CD8+T 细胞是成功应对丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的适应性免疫反应的重要组成部分。针对 HCV 疫苗设计的主要障碍是其固有的病毒序列多样性。在这里,我们检验了以下假设,即免疫显性 CD8+T 细胞表位的不同序列变体,均与 HLA Ⅰ类具有高亲和力结合,靶向不同的 T 细胞受体库,从而影响 CD8+T 细胞反应的质量。研究了 HLA-A02 限制的 HCV NS31406-1415 表位中序列差异对来自血清阴性供体的幼稚 CD8+T 细胞体外启动的影响,以及被启动的 T 细胞与其他表位变体的交叉反应性。尽管测试的六个表位变体均与 HLA-A02:01 具有高亲和力结合,但观察到 CD8+T 细胞的启动和交叉反应性存在显著差异。与最可重复的启动和诱导具有广泛交叉反应性的 T 细胞相关的变体是一种基因型 1b 变体(KLSALGLNAV),它在亚洲收集的 HCV 分离株中更为常见,但在欧洲和北美的序列中很少见。来自经常接触 HCV 的注射毒品者的 HCV 特异性记忆 CD8+T 细胞证实了这种相对罕见的表位变体的优越免疫原性和交叉反应性。总的来说,这些数据表明 HCV 分离株在表位水平上的序列差异极大地影响 CD8+T 细胞的启动和与其他表位变体的交叉反应程度。
这些结果对针对高度可变病原体的疫苗设计具有重要意义,并表明基于证据的疫苗抗原序列选择可能会提高免疫原性和 T 细胞交叉反应性。交叉反应性 CD8+T 细胞可能有利于对携带表位变体的传播病毒的免疫控制,并防止急性感染期间的免疫逃逸。为此,应考虑用于疫苗设计的稀有表位变体,甚至可能与广泛交叉反应性 T 细胞受体启动相关的改变表位序列,并需要进一步测试。