Koziel M J, Walker B D
Infectious Disease Division, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Ctr., Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Springer Semin Immunopathol. 1997;19(1):69-83. doi: 10.1007/BF00945026.
Based on our CTL studies of over 44 persons with chronic HCV infection, we are able to arrive at a number of conclusions. Clearly this cellular immune response is heterogeneous among infected persons. We have not identified any specific HCV protein which appears to be immunodominant for CTL responses, but rather we have detected diverse responses to both structural and non-structural proteins. Using an identical stimulation strategy for all persons studied, we have been able to detect responses in only approximately one third of persons with chronic infection. Among these persons, the responses among liver-infiltrating lymphocytes are greater than those detected in fresh peripheral blood, suggesting that the CTL are homing to the site of maximal viral burden in these persons. Some viral proteins contain overlapping epitopes presented by more than one HLA class I molecule, and we have also found cases where peptides in the same HLA superfamily, such as the HLA A3 superfamily which contains A11, for which the same peptide can be presented by both alleles (manuscript in preparation). Although sequence variation between the infecting strain and the vaccinia constructs used to test for responses may lead to non-recognition of some variants, even the highly conserved core protein appears to be an inconsistent and actually infrequent target for detectable CTL responses. The magnitude of the CTL response appears to vary greatly, from being undetectable to being so vigorous that it an be detected in stimulated peripheral blood. The breadth of the response also varies widely, ranging from the detection of a response to a single epitope in some persons, to the simultaneous recognition of up to five different epitopes in others. Even in persons of the same HLA type, we have not seen consistent targeting of the same epitopes except in rare cases. Despite the detection of over 20 epitopes and their restricting class I alleles using CTR derived from liver-infiltrating lymphocytes, we have identified only one epitope that has been shown to be targeted by more than one person of the same HLA type. These findings lead us to speculate that the CTL response may be submaximal in the majority of infected persons. The reasons for this are presently obscure, but could relate to a number of factors. The epitopes targeted are found within variable regions of the virus, such that immune escape from established CTL responses has to be considered a real possibility. Sequence variation may also lead to antagonism of CTL responses, as has been demonstrated for both HIV and HBV infections. Furthermore, sequence variation either within or adjacent to regions containing CTL epitopes can lead to altered antigen processing, either due to alteration of proteolytic processing of the viral peptides in the cytoplasm or to altered transport and altered association with class I molecules. A number of issues regarding the CTL response in HCV infection still require substantial attention. The apparent inability of CTL to clear this virus needs to be addressed, as does the potential role for viral immunomodulatory molecules in HCV persistence. Although we and others have shown CTL responses to be present in persons with chronic infection, the role of CTL in acute HCV infection needs to be determined. The best studied chronic human viral infection is HIV infection, in which expanding data indicate that the early events following primary infection predict the subsequent course of illness. Viral load in the first 1-2 years after infection is highly predictive of the subsequent disease course in HIV infection, and recent experimental data in humans suggest that early immune responses may be predictive of subsequent disease course. Such studies in HCV infection have been difficult to achieve, since primary HCV infection is often asymptomatic, and transfusion-related cases are now rare. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
基于我们对44名以上慢性丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)感染者的细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(CTL)研究,我们能够得出一些结论。显然,这种细胞免疫反应在感染者中是异质性的。我们尚未确定任何一种对CTL反应具有免疫优势的特定HCV蛋白,相反,我们检测到了对结构蛋白和非结构蛋白的多种反应。对所有研究对象采用相同的刺激策略,我们仅在约三分之一的慢性感染者中检测到反应。在这些人中,肝浸润淋巴细胞中的反应大于新鲜外周血中检测到的反应,这表明CTL归巢到这些人病毒负荷最大的部位。一些病毒蛋白含有由多个HLA I类分子呈递的重叠表位,我们还发现了同一HLA超家族中的肽的情况,例如包含A11的HLA A3超家族,同一肽可由两个等位基因呈递(正在准备稿件)。尽管感染毒株与用于检测反应的痘苗构建体之间的序列变异可能导致对某些变体的不识别,但即使是高度保守的核心蛋白似乎也是可检测到的CTL反应的不一致且实际上不常见的靶点。CTL反应的强度似乎差异很大,从检测不到到非常强烈以至于在刺激的外周血中都能检测到。反应的广度也有很大差异,从在一些人中检测到对单个表位的反应,到在另一些人中同时识别多达五个不同表位。即使在相同HLA类型的个体中,除了极少数情况外,我们也未看到对相同表位的一致靶向。尽管使用源自肝浸润淋巴细胞的CTL检测到了20多个表位及其限制性I类等位基因,但我们仅确定了一个已被证明被相同HLA类型的不止一人靶向的表位。这些发现使我们推测,在大多数感染者中CTL反应可能未达到最大值。其原因目前尚不清楚,但可能与多种因素有关。所靶向的表位存在于病毒的可变区域内,因此必须考虑从已建立的CTL反应中发生免疫逃逸的可能性。序列变异也可能导致CTL反应的拮抗作用,正如在HIV和HBV感染中所证明的那样。此外,包含CTL表位的区域内或其附近的序列变异可导致抗原加工改变,这要么是由于细胞质中病毒肽的蛋白水解加工改变,要么是由于转运改变以及与I类分子的结合改变。关于HCV感染中CTL反应的一些问题仍需要大量关注。CTL清除这种病毒的明显无能需要得到解决,病毒免疫调节分子在HCV持续存在中的潜在作用也需要解决。尽管我们和其他人已表明慢性感染者中存在CTL反应,但CTL在急性HCV感染中的作用仍需确定。研究得最充分的慢性人类病毒感染是HIV感染,越来越多的数据表明,初次感染后的早期事件可预测随后的病程。感染后1 - 2年内的病毒载量对HIV感染的后续病程具有高度预测性,最近在人类中的实验数据表明早期免疫反应可能预测随后的病程。在HCV感染中进行此类研究一直很困难,因为原发性HCV感染通常无症状,且输血相关病例现在很少见。(摘要截断)