Follicular CXCR5-expressing CD8^sup +^ T cells curtail chronic viral infection

During chronic viral infection, virus-specific CD8+ T cells become exhausted, exhibit poor effector function and lose memory potential1-4. However, exhausted CD8+ T cells can still contain viral replication in chronic infections5-9, although the mechanism of this containment is largely unknown. Here...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2016-09, Vol.537 (7620), p.412
Hauptverfasser: He, Ran, Hou, Shiyue, Liu, Cheng, Zhang, Anli, Bai, Qiang, Han, Miao, Yang, Yu, Wei, Gang, Shen, Ting, Yang, Xinxin, Xu, Lifan, Chen, Xiangyu, Hao, Yaxing, Wang, Pengcheng, Zhu, Chuhong, Ou, Juanjuan, Liang, Houjie, Ni, Ting, Zhang, Xiaoyan, Zhou, Xinyuan, Deng, Kai, Chen, Yaokai, Luo, Yadong, Xu, Jianqing, Qi, Hai, Wu, Yuzhang, Ye, Lilin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During chronic viral infection, virus-specific CD8+ T cells become exhausted, exhibit poor effector function and lose memory potential1-4. However, exhausted CD8+ T cells can still contain viral replication in chronic infections5-9, although the mechanism of this containment is largely unknown. Here we show that a subset of exhausted CD8+ T cells expressing the chemokine receptor CXCR5 has a critical role in the control of viral replication in mice that were chronically infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). These CXCR5+ CD8+ T cells were able to migrate into B-cell follicles, expressed lower levels of inhibitory receptors and exhibited more potent cytotoxicity than the CXCR5+ subset. Furthermore, we identified the Id2-E2A signalling axis as an important regulator of the generation of this subset. In patients with HIV, we also identified a virus-specific CXCR5+ CD8+ T-cell subset, and its number was inversely correlated with viral load. The CXCR5+ subset showed greater therapeutic potential than the CXCR5+ subset when adoptively transferred to chronically infected mice, and exhibited synergistic reduction of viral load when combined with anti-PD-L1 treatment. This study defines a unique subset of exhausted CD8+ T cells that has a pivotal role in the control of viral replication during chronic viral infection.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/nature19317