Pardy Ryan D, Rajah Maaran M, Condotta Stephanie A, Taylor Nathan G, Sagan Selena M, Richer Martin J
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Microbiome and Disease Tolerance Centre, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
PLoS Pathog. 2017 Feb 23;13(2):e1006184. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006184. eCollection 2017 Feb.
Zika virus (ZIKV) is an emerging arbovirus of the Flaviviridae family. Although ZIKV infection is typically mild and self-limiting in healthy adults, infection has been associated with neurological symptoms such as Guillain-Barré syndrome, and a causal link has been established between fetal microcephaly and ZIKV infection during pregnancy. These risks, and the magnitude of the ongoing ZIKV pandemic, have created an urgent need for the development of animal models to study the immune response to ZIKV infection. Previous animal models have primarily focused on pathogenesis in immunocompromised mice. In this study, we provide a model of ZIKV infection in wild-type immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice, and have provided an analysis of the immune response to infection. We evaluated the activation of several innate immune cell types, and studied the kinetics, phenotype, and functionality of T cell responses to ZIKV infection. Our results demonstrate that ZIKV infection is mild in wild-type immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice, resulting in minimal morbidity. Our data establish that at the peak of the adaptive response, antigen-experienced CD4+ T cells polarize to a Th1 phenotype, and antigen-experienced CD8+ T cells exhibit an activated effector phenotype, producing both effector cytokines and cytolytic molecules. Furthermore, we have identified a novel ZIKV CD8+ T cell epitope in the envelope protein that is recognized by the majority of responding cells. Our model provides an important reference point that will help dissect the impact of polymorphisms in the circulating ZIKV strains on the immune response and ZIKV pathogenesis. In addition, the identification of a ZIKV epitope will allow for the design of tetramers to study epitope-specific T cell responses, and will have important implications for the design and development of ZIKV vaccine strategies.
寨卡病毒(ZIKV)是黄病毒科一种新出现的虫媒病毒。虽然寨卡病毒感染在健康成年人中通常症状轻微且具有自限性,但该感染与吉兰-巴雷综合征等神经系统症状有关,并且已经确定胎儿小头畸形与孕期寨卡病毒感染之间存在因果联系。这些风险以及当前寨卡病毒大流行的规模,迫切需要开发动物模型来研究对寨卡病毒感染的免疫反应。先前的动物模型主要关注免疫功能低下小鼠的发病机制。在本研究中,我们提供了野生型免疫健全的C57BL/6小鼠的寨卡病毒感染模型,并对感染后的免疫反应进行了分析。我们评估了几种先天免疫细胞类型的激活情况,并研究了T细胞对寨卡病毒感染反应的动力学、表型和功能。我们的结果表明,寨卡病毒感染在野生型免疫健全的C57BL/6小鼠中症状轻微,发病率极低。我们的数据表明,在适应性反应的高峰期,经历过抗原刺激的CD4+ T细胞极化为Th1表型,经历过抗原刺激的CD8+ T细胞表现出活化的效应表型,产生效应细胞因子和溶细胞分子。此外,我们在包膜蛋白中鉴定出一种新的寨卡病毒CD8+ T细胞表位,大多数反应细胞均可识别该表位。我们的模型提供了一个重要的参考点,有助于剖析循环寨卡病毒株中的多态性对免疫反应和寨卡病毒发病机制的影响。此外,寨卡病毒表位的鉴定将有助于设计四聚体来研究表位特异性T细胞反应,并将对寨卡病毒疫苗策略的设计和开发产生重要影响。