1. Priming of CD8+ T cells against cytomegalovirus-encoded antigens is dominated by cross-presentation.
- Author
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Busche A, Jirmo AC, Welten SP, Zischke J, Noack J, Constabel H, Gatzke AK, Keyser KA, Arens R, Behrens GM, and Messerle M
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigen-Presenting Cells immunology, Antigen-Presenting Cells virology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes pathology, Clone Cells, Epitopes, T-Lymphocyte immunology, Female, Herpesviridae Infections pathology, Herpesviridae Infections virology, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Muromegalovirus genetics, Antigens, Viral immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cross-Priming immunology, Herpesviridae Infections immunology, Lymphocyte Activation immunology, Muromegalovirus immunology
- Abstract
CMV can infect dendritic cells (DCs), and direct Ag presentation could, therefore, lead to the priming of CMV-specific CD8(+) T cells. However, CMV-encoded immune evasins severely impair Ag presentation in the MHC class I pathway; thus, it is widely assumed that cross-presentation drives the priming of antiviral T cells. We assessed the contribution of direct versus cross priming in mouse CMV (MCMV) infection using recombinant viruses. DCs infected with an MCMV strain encoding the gB498 epitope from HSV-1 were unable to stimulate in vitro naive gB498-specific CD8(+) T cells from TCR transgenic mice. Infection of C57BL/6 mice with this recombinant virus led, however, to the generation of abundant numbers of gB498-specific T cells in vivo. Of the DC subsets isolated from infected mice, only CD8α(+) DCs were able to stimulate naive T cells, suggesting that this DC subset cross-presents MCMV-encoded Ag in vivo. Upon infection of mice with MCMV mutants encoding Ag that can either be well or hardly cross-presented, mainly CD8(+) T cells specific for cross-presented epitopes were generated. Moreover, even in the absence of immune evasion genes interfering with MHC class I-mediated Ag presentation, priming of T cells to Ag that can only be presented directly was not observed. We conclude that the host uses mainly DCs capable of cross-presentation to induce the CMV-specific CD8(+) T cell response during primary, acute infection and discuss the implications for the development of a CMV vaccine.
- Published
- 2013
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