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Early impairment of hepatitis C virus specific T cell proliferation during acute infection leads to failure of viral clearance
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Background and aims: Cellular mediated immunity (CMI) is thought to play a key role in resolution of primary hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. However, CD4 + and CD8 + T cell responses are also generated during acute infection in individuals who become chronic, suggesting that they developed a defective CMI. The aim of this study was to verify if and when such immune dysfunction is established by measuring the breadth, magnitude, function, and duration of CMI in a large cohort of subjects during the natural course of acute HCV infection. Methods: CMI was comprehensively studied by prospective sampling of 31 HCV acutely infected subjects enrolled at the onset of infection and followed for a median period of one year. Results: Our results indicated that while at the onset of acute HCV infection a measurable CMI with effector function was detected in the majority of subjects, after approximately six months less than 10% of chronically infected individuals displayed significant CMI compared with 70% of subjects who cleared the virus. We showed that progressive disappearance of HCV specific T cells from the peripheral blood of chronic patients was due to an impaired ability to proliferate that could be rescued in vitro by concomitant exposure to interleukin 2 and the antigen. Conclusion: Our data provide evidence of strong and multispecific T cell responses with a sustained ability to proliferate in response to antigen stimulation as reliable pharmacodynamic measures of a protective CMI during acute infection, and suggest that early impairment of proliferation may contribute to loss of T cell response and chronic HCV persistence.
- Subjects :
- Interleukin 2
IMMUNE-RESPONSES
Hepatitis C virus
T cell
PERSISTENCE
Gastroenterology
HCV INFECTION
chemical and pharmacologic phenomena
Hepatitis C
DETERMINANTS
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
medicine.disease
THERAPY
Virus
medicine.anatomical_structure
Antigen
Immunity
Immunology
medicine
CD8
CD4(+)
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7fb48bcc3a49221951fb6e865208712f