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  4. Signatures of T and B cell development, functional responses and PD-1 upregulation after HCMV latent infections and reactivations in Nod.Rag.Gamma mice humanized with cord blood CD34(+) cells
 
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2018
Journal Article
Title

Signatures of T and B cell development, functional responses and PD-1 upregulation after HCMV latent infections and reactivations in Nod.Rag.Gamma mice humanized with cord blood CD34(+) cells

Abstract
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) latency is typically harmless but reactivation can be largely detrimental to immune compromised hosts. We modeled latency and reactivation using a traceable HCMV laboratory strain expressing the Gaussia luciferase reporter gene (HCMV/GLuc) in order to interrogate the viral modulatory effects on the human adaptive immunity. Humanized mice with long-term (more than 17 weeks) steady human T and B cell immune reconstitutions were infected with HCMV/GLuc and 7 weeks later were further treated with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) to induce viral reactivations. Whole body bio-luminescence imaging analyses clearly differentiated mice with latent viral infections vs. reactivations. Foci of vigorous viral reactivations were detectable in liver, lymph nodes and salivary glands. The number of viral genome copies in various tissues increased upon reactivations and were detectable in sorted human CD14(+), CD169(+), and CD34(+) cells. Compared with non-infected controls, mice after infections and reactivations showed higher thymopoiesis, systemic expansion of Th, CTL, Treg, and Tfh cells and functional antiviral T cell responses. Latent infections promoted vast development of memory CD4(+) T cells while reactivations triggered a shift toward effector T cells expressing PD-1. Further, reactivations prompted a marked development of B cells, maturation of IgG(+) plasma cells, and HCMV-specific antibody responses. Multivariate statistical methods were employed using T and B cell immune phenotypic profiles obtained with cells from several tissues of individual mice. The data was used to identify combinations of markers that could predict an HCMV infection vs. reactivation status. In spleen, but not in lymph nodes, higher frequencies of effector CD4(+) T cells expressing PD-1 were among the factors most suited to distinguish HCMV reactivations from infections. These results suggest a shift from a T cell dominated immune response during latent infections toward an exhausted T cell phenotype and active humoral immune response upon reactivations. In sum, this novel in vivo humanized model combined with advanced analyses highlights a dynamic system clearly specifying the immunological spatial signatures of HCMV latency and reactivations. These signatures can be merged as predictive biomarker clusters that can be applied in the clinical translation of new therapies for the control of HCMV reactivation.
Author(s)
Theobald, Sebastian J.
Khailaie, Sahamoddin
Meyer-Hermann, Michael
Volk, Valery
Olbrich, Henning
Danisch, Simon
Gerasch, Laura
Schneider, Andreas
Sinzger, Christian
Schaudien, Dirk  
Lienenklaus, Stefan
Riese, Peggy  
Guzman, Carlos A.
Figueiredo, Constanca
Kaisenberg, Constantin von
Spineli, Loukia M.
Glaesener, Stephanie
Meyer-Bahlburg, Almut
Ganser, Arnold
Schmitt, Michael  
Mach, Michael
Messerle, Martin
Stripecke, Renata
Journal
Frontiers in Immunology  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (4.68 MB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2018.02734
10.24406/publica-r-257035
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Toxikologie und Experimentelle Medizin ITEM  
Keyword(s)
  • B cell class switch

  • HCMV

  • T cell maturation

  • humanized mice

  • linear discriminant analysis

  • optical imaging analyses

  • principal component analysis

  • reactivation

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