Subinfectious hepatitis C virus exposures suppress T cell responses against subsequent acute infection

亚感染性丙型肝炎病毒暴露可抑制针对后续急性感染的 T 细胞反应

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作者:Su-Hyung Park, Naga Suresh Veerapu, Eui-Cheol Shin, Angélique Biancotto, J Philip McCoy, Stefania Capone, Antonella Folgori, Barbara Rehermann

Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is endemic in many countries due to its high propensity for establishing persistence. The presence of HCV-specific T cells in subjects repeatedly exposed to HCV who test negative for HCV RNA and antibodies and who do not have any history of HCV infection has been interpreted as T cell-mediated protection. Here, we show in nonhuman primates that repeated exposure to human plasma with trace amounts of HCV induced HCV-specific T cells without seroconversion and systemic viremia but did not protect upon subsequent HCV challenge. Rather, HCV-specific recall and de novo T cell responses, as well as intrahepatic T cell recruitment and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) production, were suppressed upon HCV challenge, concomitant with quantitative and qualitative changes in regulatory T cells (T(reg) cells) that occurred after subinfectious HCV exposure and increased after HCV challenge. In vitro T(reg) cell depletion restored HCV-specific T cell responses. Thus, T cells primed by trace amounts of HCV do not generate effective recall responses upon subsequent HCV infection. Subinfectious HCV exposure predisposes to T(reg) cell expansion, which suppresses effector T cells during subsequent infection. Strategies to reverse this exposure-induced immune suppression should be examined to aid in the development of T cell-based vaccines against HCV and other endemic pathogens.

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