Persistent lentivirus infection induces early myeloid suppressor cells expansion to subvert protective memory CD8 T cell response

Memory CD8+T cell responses play an essential role in protection against persistent infection. However, HIV-1 evades vaccine-induced memory CD8+T cell response by mechanisms that are not fully understood. We analyzed the temporal dynamics of CD8+T cell recall activity and function during EcoHIV infe...

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Veröffentlicht in:EBioMedicine 2020-10, Vol.60, p.103008-103008, Article 103008
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Li, Lin, Qingqing, Peng, Jie, Fang, Jun, Tan, Zhiwu, Tang, Hangying, Kwan, Kayi, Nishiura, Kenji, Liang, Jianguo, Kwok, Hauyee, Du, Zhenglong, Sun, Jiaze, Liu, Kang, Yuen, Kwok-Yung, Wang, Hui, Chen, Zhiwei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Memory CD8+T cell responses play an essential role in protection against persistent infection. However, HIV-1 evades vaccine-induced memory CD8+T cell response by mechanisms that are not fully understood. We analyzed the temporal dynamics of CD8+T cell recall activity and function during EcoHIV infection in a potent PD1-based vaccine immunized immunocompetent mice. Upon intraperitoneal EcoHIV infection, high levels of HIV-1 GAG-specific CD8+T lymphocytes recall response reduced EcoHIV-infected cells significantly. However, this protective effect diminished quickly after seven days, followed by a rapid reduction of GAG-specific CD8+T cell number and activity, and viral persistence. Mechanistically, EcoHIV activated dendritic cells (DCs) and myeloid cells. Myeloid cells were infected and rapidly expanded, exhibiting elevated PD-L1/-L2 expression and T cell suppressive function before day 7, and were resistant to CD8+T cell-mediated apoptosis. Depletion of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) reduced EcoHIV infection and boosted T cell responses. This study provides an overview of the temporal interplay of persistent virus, DCs, MDSCs and antigen-specific CD8+T cells during acute infection. We identify MDSCs as critical gatekeepers that restrain antiviral T cell memory responses, and highlight MDSCs as an important target for developing effective vaccines against chronic human infections. Hong Kong Research Grant Council (T11–709/18-N, HKU5/CRF/13G), General Research Fund (17122915 and 17114114), Hong Kong Health and Medical Research Fund (11100752, 14130582, 16150662), Grant RGC-ANR A-HKU709/14, the San-Ming Project of Medicine (SZSM201512029), University Development Fund of the University of Hong Kong and Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine Matching Fund to HKU AIDS Institute.
ISSN:2352-3964
2352-3964
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2020.103008