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Adoptive transfer of EBV specific CD8+ T cell clones can transiently control EBV infection in humanized mice

Authors :
Antsiferova, Olga
Müller, Anne
Rämer, Patrick C
Chijioke, Obinna; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4247-5947
Chatterjee, Bithi
Raykova, Ana
Planas, Raquel
Sospedra, Mireia
Shumilov, Anatoliy
Tsai, Ming-Han
Delecluse, Henri-Jacques
Münz, Christian
Antsiferova, Olga
Müller, Anne
Rämer, Patrick C
Chijioke, Obinna; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4247-5947
Chatterjee, Bithi
Raykova, Ana
Planas, Raquel
Sospedra, Mireia
Shumilov, Anatoliy
Tsai, Ming-Han
Delecluse, Henri-Jacques
Münz, Christian
Source :
Antsiferova, Olga; Müller, Anne; Rämer, Patrick C; Chijioke, Obinna; Chatterjee, Bithi; Raykova, Ana; Planas, Raquel; Sospedra, Mireia; Shumilov, Anatoliy; Tsai, Ming-Han; Delecluse, Henri-Jacques; Münz, Christian (2014). Adoptive transfer of EBV specific CD8+ T cell clones can transiently control EBV infection in humanized mice. PLoS Pathogens, 10(8):e1004333.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Epstein Barr virus (EBV) infection expands CD8+ T cells specific for lytic antigens to high frequencies during symptomatic primary infection, and maintains these at significant numbers during persistence. Despite this, the protective function of these lytic EBV antigen-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cells remains unclear. Here we demonstrate that lytic EBV replication does not significantly contribute to virus-induced B cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo in a mouse model with reconstituted human immune system components (huNSG mice). However, we report a trend to reduction of EBV-induced lymphoproliferation outside of lymphoid organs upon diminished lytic replication. Moreover, we could demonstrate that CD8+ T cells against the lytic EBV antigen BMLF1 can eliminate lytically replicating EBV-transformed B cells from lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) and in vivo, thereby transiently controlling high viremia after adoptive transfer into EBV infected huNSG mice. These findings suggest a protective function for lytic EBV antigen-specific CD8+ T cells against EBV infection and against virus-associated tumors in extra-lymphoid organs. These specificities should be explored for EBV-specific vaccine development.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Antsiferova, Olga; Müller, Anne; Rämer, Patrick C; Chijioke, Obinna; Chatterjee, Bithi; Raykova, Ana; Planas, Raquel; Sospedra, Mireia; Shumilov, Anatoliy; Tsai, Ming-Han; Delecluse, Henri-Jacques; Münz, Christian (2014). Adoptive transfer of EBV specific CD8+ T cell clones can transiently control EBV infection in humanized mice. PLoS Pathogens, 10(8):e1004333.
Notes :
application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-100745, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn942501010
Document Type :
Electronic Resource