Renzaho Angelique, Podlech Jürgen, Kühnapfel Birgit, Blaum Franziska, Reddehase Matthias J, Lemmermann Niels A W
Institute for Virology and Research Center for Immunotherapy (FZI), University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University of Mainz, Mainz, Germany.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2020 Apr 21;10:138. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.00138. eCollection 2020.
Reactivation of latent cytomegalovirus (CMV) in recipients of hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) not only results in severe organ manifestations, but can also cause "graft failure" resulting in bone marrow (BM) aplasia. This inhibition of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell engraftment is a manifestation of CMV infection that is long known in clinical hematology as "myelosuppression." Previous studies in a murine model of sex-chromosome mismatched but otherwise syngeneic HCT and infection with murine CMV have shown that transplanted hematopoietic cells (HC) initially home to the BM stroma of recipients but then fail to further divide and differentiate. Data from this model were in line with the hypothesis that infection of stromal cells, which constitute "hematopoietic niches" where hematopoiesis takes place, causes a local deficiency in essential hematopoietins. Based on this understanding, one must postulate that preventing infection of stromal cells should restore the stroma's capacity to support hematopoiesis. Adoptively-transferred antiviral CD8 T cells prevent lethal CMV disease by controlling viral spread and histopathology in vital organs, such as liver and lungs. It remained to be tested, however, if they can also prevent infection of the BM stroma and thus allow for successful HC engraftment. Here we demonstrate that antiviral CD8 T cells control stromal infection. By tracking male donor-derived HC in the BM of infected female recipients, we show the CD8 T cells allow for successful donor HC engraftment and thereby prevent CMV-associated BM aplasia. These data provide a further argument for cytoimmunotherapy of CMV infection after HCT.
造血细胞移植(HCT)受者体内潜伏的巨细胞病毒(CMV)重新激活不仅会导致严重的器官表现,还会引起“移植失败”,导致骨髓(BM)发育不全。造血干细胞和祖细胞植入的这种抑制是CMV感染的一种表现,在临床血液学中早就被称为“骨髓抑制”。先前在性染色体不匹配但其他方面同基因的HCT和鼠巨细胞病毒感染的小鼠模型中的研究表明,移植的造血细胞(HC)最初归巢到受者的骨髓基质,但随后无法进一步分裂和分化。该模型的数据与以下假设一致,即构成发生造血的“造血龛”的基质细胞感染会导致必需造血生长因子的局部缺乏。基于这种理解,人们必须假定预防基质细胞感染应能恢复基质支持造血的能力。过继转移的抗病毒CD8 T细胞通过控制病毒在肝脏和肺等重要器官中的传播和组织病理学来预防致命的CMV疾病。然而,它们是否也能预防骨髓基质感染从而使HC成功植入仍有待测试。在这里,我们证明抗病毒CD8 T细胞可控制基质感染。通过追踪受感染雌性受者骨髓中雄性供体来源的HC,我们表明CD8 T细胞可使供体HC成功植入,从而预防CMV相关的骨髓发育不全。这些数据为HCT后CMV感染的细胞免疫治疗提供了进一步的依据。