Contemporaneous fluctuations in T cell responses to persistent herpes virus infections
Contribuinte(s) |
L. L. Reth |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2005
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Resumo |
The classical paradigm for T cell dynamics suggests that the resolution of a primary acute virus infection is followed by the generation of a long-lived pool of memory T cells that is thought to be highly stable. Very limited alteration in this repertoire is expected until the immune system is re-challenged by reactivation of latent viruses or by cross-reactive pathogens. Contradicting this view, we show here that the T cell repertoire specific for two different latent herpes viruses in the peripheral blood displayed significant contemporaneous co-fluctuations of virus-specific CD8(+) T cells. The coordinated responses to two different viruses suggest that the fluctuations within the T cell repertoire may be driven by sub-clinical viral reactivation or a more generalized 'bystander' effect. The later contention was supported by the observation that, while absolute number of CD3(+) T cells and their subsets and also the cell surface phenotype of antigen-specific T cells remained relatively constant, a loss of CD62L expression in the total CD8(+) T cell population was coincident with the expansion of tetramer-positive virus-specific T cells. This study demonstrates that the dynamic process of T cell expansion and contractions in persistent viral infections is not limited to the acute phase of infection, but also continues during the latent phase of infection. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA |
Palavras-Chave | #Immunology #Virus #T Cells #Epitopes #Hla #Persistence #Real-time Pcr #Homeostatic Proliferation #Viral-infections #Cutting Edge #In-vitro #Memory #Cd8(+) #Antigen #Cytomegalovirus #Maintenance #C1 #320202 Cellular Immunology #730101 Infectious diseases |
Tipo |
Journal Article |