CD100 Up-Regulation Induced by Interferon- alpha on B Cells Is Related to Hepatitis C Virus Infection: e113338

Objectives CD100, also known as Sema4D, is a member of the semaphorin family and has important regulatory functions that promote immune cell activation and responses. The role of CD100 expression on B cells in immune regulation during chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains unclear. Materi...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-12, Vol.9 (12)
Hauptverfasser: He, Yu, Guo, Yonghong, Zhou, Yun, Zhang, Ying, Fan, Chao, Ji, Guangxi, Wang, Yu, Ma, Zhiyuan, Lian, Jianqi, Hao, Chunqiu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives CD100, also known as Sema4D, is a member of the semaphorin family and has important regulatory functions that promote immune cell activation and responses. The role of CD100 expression on B cells in immune regulation during chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains unclear. Materials and Methods We longitudinally investigated the altered expression of CD100, its receptor CD72, and other activation markers CD69 and CD86 on B cells in 20 chronic HCV-infected patients before and after treatment with pegylated interferon-alpha (Peg-IFN- alpha ) and ribavirin (RBV) by flow cytometry. Results The frequency of CD5+ B cells as well as the expression levels of CD100, CD69 and CD86 was significantly increased in chronic HCV patients and returned to normal in patients with sustained virological response after discontinuation of IFN- alpha /RBV therapy. Upon IFN- alpha treatment, CD100 expression on B cells and the two subsets was further up-regulated in patients who achieved early virological response, and this was confirmed by in vitro experiments. Moreover, the increased CD100 expression via IFN- alpha was inversely correlated with the decline of the HCV-RNA titer during early-phase treatment. Conclusions Peripheral B cells show an activated phenotype during chronic HCV infection. Moreover, IFN- alpha therapy facilitates the reversion of disrupted B cell homeostasis, and up-regulated expression of CD100 may be indirectly related to HCV clearance.
ISSN:1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0113338