Zenkov Viktor S, O'Connor James H, Cockburn Ian A, Ganusov Vitaly V
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, United States.
Division of Immunology, Inflammation and Infectious Disease, John Curtin School of Medical Research, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
Front Bioinform. 2022 Jan 31;1:770448. doi: 10.3389/fbinf.2021.770448. eCollection 2021.
Malaria is a disease caused by parasites, resulting in over 200 million infections and 400,000 deaths every year. A critical step of malaria infection is when sporozoites, injected by mosquitoes, travel to the liver and form liver stages. Malaria vaccine candidates which induce large numbers of malaria-specific CD8 T cells in mice are able to eliminate all liver stages, preventing fulminant malaria. However, how CD8 T cells find all parasites in 48 h of the liver stage lifespan is not well understood. Using intravital microscopy of murine livers, we generated unique data on T cell search for malaria liver stages within a few hours after infection. To detect attraction of T cells to an infection site, we used the von Mises-Fisher distribution in 3D, similar to the 2D von Mises distribution previously used in ecology. Our results suggest that the vast majority (70-95%) of malaria-specific and non-specific liver-localized CD8 T cells did not display attraction towards the infection site, suggesting that the search for malaria liver stages occurs randomly. However, a small fraction (15-20%) displayed weak but detectable attraction towards parasites which already had been surrounded by several T cells. We found that speeds and turning angles correlated with attraction, suggesting that understanding mechanisms that determine the speed of T cell movement in the liver may improve the efficacy of future T cell-based vaccines. Stochastic simulations suggest that a small movement bias towards the parasite dramatically reduces the number of CD8 T cells needed to eliminate all malaria liver stages, but to detect such attraction by individual cells requires data from long imaging experiments which are not currently feasible. Importantly, as far as we know this is the first demonstration of how activated/memory CD8 T cells might search for the pathogen in nonlymphoid tissues a few hours after infection. We have also established a framework for how attraction of individual T cells towards a location in 3D can be rigorously evaluated.
疟疾是一种由寄生虫引起的疾病,每年导致超过2亿人感染,40万人死亡。疟疾感染的关键步骤是被蚊子注入的子孢子进入肝脏并形成肝期。在小鼠中能诱导大量疟疾特异性CD8 T细胞的疟疾疫苗候选物能够清除所有肝期,预防暴发性疟疾。然而,CD8 T细胞如何在肝期寿命的48小时内找到所有寄生虫尚不清楚。通过对小鼠肝脏进行活体显微镜观察,我们在感染后数小时内生成了关于T细胞寻找疟疾肝期的独特数据。为了检测T细胞对感染部位的吸引力,我们在三维空间中使用了冯·米塞斯-费舍尔分布,类似于先前在生态学中使用的二维冯·米塞斯分布。我们的结果表明,绝大多数(70-95%)疟疾特异性和非特异性肝脏定位的CD8 T细胞对感染部位没有显示出吸引力,这表明寻找疟疾肝期是随机发生的。然而,一小部分(15-20%)对已经被几个T细胞包围的寄生虫表现出微弱但可检测到的吸引力。我们发现速度和转向角度与吸引力相关,这表明了解决定肝脏中T细胞运动速度的机制可能会提高未来基于T细胞的疫苗的疗效。随机模拟表明,向寄生虫的微小运动偏差会显著减少清除所有疟疾肝期所需的CD8 T细胞数量,但要检测单个细胞的这种吸引力需要来自长时间成像实验的数据,而目前这是不可行的。重要的是,据我们所知,这是首次证明活化/记忆CD8 T细胞在感染后数小时如何在非淋巴组织中寻找病原体。我们还建立了一个框架,用于严格评估单个T细胞对三维空间中一个位置的吸引力。