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Reversal of nonstructural protein 3-specific CD4+ T cell dysfunction in patients with persistent hepatitis C virus infection

Authors :
Silvia Sauleda
Marta Bes
Juan Ignacio Esteban
L. Puig
Maria Cubero
Jaime Guardia
Maria Piron
Isabel Campos-Varela
Josep Quer
Natalia Casamitjana
Source :
Journal of Viral Hepatitis. 19:283-294
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Wiley, 2011.

Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific T cell responses are essential for HCV control, and chronic infection is characterized by functionally altered antigen-specific T cells. It has been proposed that the early inactivation of specific CD4(+) T cell responses may be involved in establishment of HCV persistence. We have investigated whether HCV-specific CD4(+) T cells dysfunction can be reversed in vitro. Nonstructural protein 3 (NS3) and core-specific CD4(+) T cells from eight chronically infected and eight spontaneously resolved HCV individuals were selected through transient CD154 (CD40 ligand) expression, and their functional profile (IFN-γ, IL-2, TNF-α, IL-10 and IL-4 production by enzyme-linked immunospot assay, cytometric bead array and intracellular cytokine staining, and proliferation by carboxy-fluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester dilution assay) was determined both ex vivo and after in vitro expansion of sorted CD154-expressing cells in the absence of specific antigen in IL-7/IL-15-supplemented medium. Ex vivo bulk CD4(+) T cells from chronic patients expressed CD154 in most cases, albeit at lower frequencies than those of resolved patients (0.11%vs 0.41%; P = 0.01), when stimulated with NS3, but not core, although they had a markedly impaired capacity to produce IL-2 and IFN-γ. Antigen-free in vitro expansion of NS3-specific CD154(+) cells from chronic patients restored IFN-γ and IL-2 production and proliferation to levels similar to those of patients with spontaneously resolved infection. Hence, NS3-specific CD4(+) T cell response can be rescued in most chronic HCV patients by in vitro expansion in the absence of HCV-specific antigen. These results might provide a rationale for adoptive immunotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
13520504
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Viral Hepatitis
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1be2d76056c63989c33ebb1d708cba87
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2893.2011.01549.x