Overcoming original antigenic sin to generate effective immune responses in antigen primed host


Autoria(s): Liu, X.; Leggatt, G.; Fernando, G. J.; Frazer, I. H.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Original antigenic sin is failure to mount effective immunity to virus variants in a previously virus infected host. We have previously shown that prior immunity to a virus capsid protein inhibits induction from naive CD8 T cells of an IFN-g response to a MHC class I restricted epitope linked to the capsid protein, following immunisation with a capsid expressing the class I restricted epitope. The inhibition is independent of pre-existing antibody to the viral capsid, and the inhibition is observed in animal lacking B cells. CD8 restricted viral capsid specific T cell responses are also not required, but the inhibition is not observed in IL10 knockout mice. We now demonstrate that capsid antigen primed CD4+ T cells secrete IL10 in response to capsid antigen presented by DC, and deviate CD8 cells specific for the linked MHC Class I restricted epitope from IFN-g production to IL-5 production. Neutralizing IL10, either in vitro or in vivo, restores induction following immunisation of an antigen specific IFN-g response to an MHC Class I restricted epitope. This finding demonstrates a strategy for overcoming bias towards a Tc2 response to MHC Class I epitopes upon immunisation of a host already primed to antigen, facilitating immunotherapy for chronic viral infection or cancer

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:56051

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing

Palavras-Chave #Cell Biology #Immunology #Pathology
Tipo

Journal Article