Comparison of Influenza and SIV Specific CD8 T Cell Responses in Macaques
Author(s) -
Sinthujan Jegaskanda,
Jeanette C. Reece,
Robert De Rose,
John Stambas,
Lucy C. Sullivan,
Andrëw G. Brööks,
Stephen J. Kent,
Amy Sexton
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0032431
Subject(s) - biology , virology , simian immunodeficiency virus , cytotoxic t cell , immunology , cd8 , t cell , macaque , influenza a virus , avidity , immune system , virus , antigen , genetics , in vitro , paleontology
Macaques are a potentially useful non-human primate model to compare memory T-cell immunity to acute virus pathogens such as influenza virus and effector T-cell responses to chronic viral pathogens such as SIV. However, immunological reagents to study influenza CD8 + T-cell responses in the macaque model are limited. We recently developed an influenza-SIV vaccination model of pigtail macaques ( Macaca nemestrina ) and used this to study both influenza-specific and SIV-specific CD8 + T-cells in 39 pigtail macaques expressing the common Mane-A*10 + (Mane-A01*084) MHC-I allele. To perform comparative studies between influenza and SIV responses a common influenza nucleoprotein-specific CD8 + T-cell response was mapped to a minimal epitope (termed RA9), MHC-restricted to Mane-A*10 and an MHC tetramer developed to study this response. Influenza-specific memory CD8 + T-cell response maintained a highly functional profile in terms of multitude of effector molecule expression (CD107a, IFN-γ, TNF-α, MIP-1β and IL-2) and showed high avidity even in the setting of SIV infection. In contrast, within weeks following active SIV infection, SIV-specific CD8 + effector T-cells expressed fewer cytokines/degranulation markers and had a lower avidity compared to influenza specific CD8 + T-cells. Further, the influenza specific memory CD8 T-cell response retained stable expression of the exhaustion marker programmed death-marker-1 (PD-1) and co-stimulatory molecule CD28 following infection with SIV. This contrasted with the effector SIV-specific CD8 + T-cells following SIV infection which expressed significantly higher amounts of PD-1 and lower amounts of CD28. Our results suggest that strategies to maintain a more functional CD8 + T-cell response, profile may assist in controlling HIV disease.
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