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* Department of Immunology and Molecular Pathology, Division of Infection and Immunity, University College London, London, United Kingdom;
Department of Dermatology, Royal Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom; and
Department of Rheumatology, Birmingham University Medical School, Birmingham, United Kingdom
| Abstract |
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, which induced loss of costimulatory receptors and inhibited telomerase in activated CD4+ T cells and was secreted at high levels by CMV-stimulated plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC). The CMV-specific CD4+ T cells in elderly subjects had severely restricted replicative capacity. This is the first description of a human memory T cell population that is susceptible to being lost through end-stage differentiation due to the combined effects of lifelong virus reactivation in the presence of bystander differentiation-inducing factors. | Introduction |
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CMV is a
-herpes virus with a prevalence of between 60 and 90% worldwide, most often acquired during an asymptomatic primary infection in early childhood, after which the virus establishes lifelong persistence (10). The carriage of CMV has long been considered harmless to individuals with a functional immune system (4, 11). However, recent longitudinal studies have defined an immune risk phenotype (IRP) that is predictive of significantly decreased 2- and 4-year survival of patients above the age of 80 years (12, 13). The IRP is comprised of a cluster of immune parameters, including CMV seropositivity, a CD4:CD8 T cell ratio of <1, increased proportions of highly differentiated CD8+CD28 T cells, the presence of CD8+ T cell clonal expansions, and elevated serum levels of proinflammatory cytokines (12, 13). Recent studies have shown that the majority of highly differentiated oligoclonal CD8+ T cell populations that are found in elderly individuals (14) are specific for CMV (15, 16, 17). Thus, CMV may have a more insidious effect on the immune system than previously appreciated; however, it is still unclear how the various immune changes that comprise the IRP are linked and why CMV appears to reduce survival in old age.
Although most studies on the T cell response to CMV infection have focused on the CD8+ T cell population, the limited data available suggests that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells are also more differentiated than EBV-specific populations as defined by surface phenotype (18, 19). However, it is unclear if they show signs of functional differentiation. Previous studies have shown that differentiation related to changes in telomere length in CD4 cells also relate to functional differentiation of these cells in terms of cytokine production (20). To clarify these issues, we have modified previous technology (21) to investigate telomere erosion as a functional marker of T cell differentiation in CMV-specific CD4+ T cells (22, 23). Telomeres are repeating hexameric sequence of nucleotides at the ends of chromosomes that shorten by 50100 bp/division in the absence of compensatory signals from the enzyme telomerase (24, 25, 26, 27). The key points are that highly differentiated T cells have short telomeres, lose the capacity to express telomerase activity, and have considerably reduced capacity to divide (27, 28). Our recent studies showing that IFN-
directly inhibits telomerase activity and accelerates telomere erosion of human memory CD4+ T cells in vivo (22) raised the possibility that this cytokine, that is known to be secreted in response to CMV in vitro (29, 30) and in vivo (31), may contribute to the accelerated differentiation of CMV-specific T cells.
In this study, we show CMV infection drives CD4+ T cells toward inexorable end-stage differentiation, which may lead eventually to the loss of functional CMV-specific memory CD4+ T cells in elderly subjects. The loss of functional CMV-specific memory leading to either direct or indirect pathological effects of the virus (4) may be one possible explanation of why CMV infection has a negative impact on survival of elderly individuals.
| Materials and Methods |
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Heparinized blood was collected from young (mean age, 28 years; range, 2240 years; n = 30) or elderly (mean age, 81 years; range, 7194 years; n = 37) donors, with approval from the Ethics Committee of the Royal Free Hospital. Young donors were recruited from healthy staff members. Elderly volunteers were recruited from the Outpatients Department at the Royal Free Hospital and from the general public; all elderly subjects were mobile, did not have any cognitive impairment, were not suffering from acute or chronic illness, and were not on medication known to affect the immune system. Serum IgG titers for CMV, VZV, EBV, and HSV were determined by the routine hospital screening service. The percentages of individuals that tested positive for serum IgG for the viruses were as follows: young groupCMV 52%, VZV 90%, HSV 71%, and EBV 100%; and elderly groupCMV 66%, VZV 95%, HSV 72%, and EBV 100%. The majority (90%) of young individuals had been bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccinated, compared with only 3% of the elderly group. None of the individuals tested had a previous history of tuberculosis infection. PBMC were prepared by density centrifugation on Ficoll-Paque (Amersham Biosciences).
Intracellular cytokine staining
The following Ags were used to stimulate PBMC before intracellular cytokine staining: 10 µg/ml purified protein derivative (PPD; Statens Serum Institute), 1/25 dilution VZV-infected cell lysate, 1/200 dilution EBV-infected B cell lysate, and 1/50 dilution HSV-infected cell lysate (all from East Coast Biologics). CMV-infected cell lysate (used at 1/10 dilution) was prepared by infecting human embryonic lung fibroblasts with the Towne strain of CMV (European Collection of Animal Cell Cultures) at a multiplicity of infection of 2. After 5 days, the infected cells were lysed by repeated freeze-thaw cycles. PBMC were left unstimulated or stimulated with antigenic lysates for 15 h at 37°C in a humidified CO2 atmosphere, with 5 µg/ml brefeldin A (Sigma-Aldrich) added after 2 h. The cells were surface stained with CD4-PerCP, CD27-PE, and CD28-FITC and then fixed, permeabilized (Fix & Perm Cell Permeabilization kit; Caltag Laboratories), and stained with IFN-
-allophycocyanin. Uninfected cell lysates did not induce any IFN-
secretion. Four-parameter flow cytometric analysis was performed on a FACSCalibur (BD Biosciences) using CellQuest software. There was concordance between seropositivity and a positive IFN-
response in the blood for CMV, EBV, and HSV. However, particularly in the elderly group, not all individuals that were seropositive (95%) for VZV had a blood response (50%). In the case of PPD, in young individuals 81% had a blood response compared with 68% with a tuberculin skin response, while in the elderly 71% had a blood response compared with only 4% responding in the skin and this is the subject of ongoing studies.
Measurement of telomere length by flow cytometric detection of fluorescence in situ hybridization (flow-FISH)
To measure telomere length of Ag-specific CD4+ T cells, we developed a three-color flow-FISH technique, which was modified from the original methodology described by Lansdorp et al. (21). After overnight stimulation with Ag as described above, samples were stained using CD4-biotin (Immunotech) and streptavidin-Cy3 (Cedarlane Laboratories), fixed, permeabilized, and stained with IFN-
-FITC (BD Biosciences). Cells were washed once in hybridization buffer (70% formamide, 20 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, and 1% BSA) and then incubated at 82°C for 10 min with 0.75 µg/ml Cy5-conjugated telomeric (CCCTAA) peptide nucleic acid probe (Applied Biosystems). After rapid cooling on ice, the samples were hybridized for 1 h at room temperature in the dark, washed twice each in posthybridization buffer (70% formamide, 10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 0.1% BSA, and 0.1% Tween 20) and PBSA, and analyzed by flow cytometry. Samples were analyzed with and without probe to control for differences in background fluorescence between samples. To ensure consistency of the results between experiments, two cryopreserved PBMC samples with known telomere fluorescence were used as standards. Results were obtained as median fluorescence intensity values, which could then be converted to telomere length in kilobases using a standard curve. The standard curve was constructed using 30 samples of varying telomere length analyzed both by flow-FISH and telomeric restriction fragment analysis. Telomere length in sorted CD4+ T cell subsets was measured as described previously (22).
Telomerase assays
Telomerase activity was measured using the telomeric repeat amplification protocol (TRAPeze Telomerase Detection kit; Serologicals) according to the manufacturers instructions. Cell extracts were prepared from snap-frozen cell samples, where the volume of the cell extract was adjusted so as to yield 500/250 Ki67+ T cells per reaction as described previously (22). Absolute numbers of proliferating T cells were enumerated by using TruCOUNT tubes with Tritest and also staining for CD3 and intracellular Ki67 (all BD Biosciences). The negative controls included a sample where no cell extract was added. Extracts from a telomerase producing tumor cell line was used as a positive control. In addition, an eight-repeat telomeric PCR template was also include among the controls for the calculation of telomerase activity.
Culture of Ag-specific cell lines
PBMC were stimulated with either PPD (1 µg/ml) or CMV-infected cell lysate (1/100 dilution). Ag-specific cell lines were maintained in HyQ RPMI 1640 (HyClone) containing 10% human AB serum, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 2 mM L-glutamine (all Sigma-Aldrich) with 5 ng/ml IL-2 added every 23 days. Cell lines were restimulated every 1014 days with Ag-pulsed irradiated autologous PBMC. Absolute cell numbers were enumerated during and after each cycle of expansion using TruCOUNT tubes, and population doublings (PD) were calculated using the equation: PD = log (number of cells counted after expansion) log (number of cells seeded)/log2. Cell lines were free of mycoplasma tested for using the MycoAlert Mycoplasma Detection kit (Cambrex).
Measurement of IFN-
PBMC or sorted cell subsets were cultured overnight at a concentration of 106 cells/ml with medium alone, 1/10 dilution of CMV-infected cell lysate or 10 µg/ml PPD, after which culture supernatants were harvested and stored at 80°C. IFN-
was measured in the cell culture supernatants using an IFN-
ELISA kit that detects human IFN-
A,
2,
A/D,
D,
K, and
4b (PBL Biomedical Laboratories).
Cell sorting of CD4+ T cell subsets
PBMC were first depleted of CD45RA+ cells by labeling with CD45RA-conjugated microbeads and eluting through an AS depletion column (Miltenyi Biotec). The remaining cells were then labeled with CD4-PerCP, CD28-PE (BD Biosciences), and CD27-FITC (Serotec) and sorted using a MoFlo cell sorter (DakoCytomation) to obtain subsets of CD4+ T cells. The purity and absolute number of CD4+ T cell subsets was assessed by flow cytometry using TruCOUNT tubes, and purity was always >98%.
Cell sorting of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC)
PDC were identified by flow cytometry after staining with CD123-PE (BD Pharmingen) and BDCA-2 (Miltenyi Biotec). PDC were either depleted from PBMC or enriched using the BDCA-4 isolation kit (Miltenyi Biotec) according to the manufacturers instructions and magnetic bead isolation over an AS column (Miltenyi Biotec).
Statistical analysis
We used the Students t test, the Mann-Whitney U test, or the Wilcoxon-matched pairs test to analyze the results.
| Results |
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Although it is known that CMV-specific CD8 T cells accumulate with age (32), it is not clear if the same applies to the CMV-specific CD4+ T cell population. We identified Ag-specific CD4+ T cells using a system of antigenic stimulation in the presence of Brefeldin A followed by flow-cytometric detection of the specific cells that synthesize IFN-
. In both young and old subjects, CMV-specific CD4+ T cells were only observed in individuals who were seropositive for CMV (Fig. 1, A and B). This was also the case for the other Ags tested in this study (data not shown). We compared the frequency of CD4 T cells in young and old individuals that were specific for the persistent herpes viruses CMV, HSV (herpes simplex virus), EBV, and VZV and the recall Ag PPD (tuberculin-purified protein derivative) (Fig. 1, C and D). Not all individuals responded to all of the Ags, and for each individual, only positive responses to the various Ags are shown. Although the absolute numbers of CD4+ T cells in young and old subjects were not significantly different from each other (data not shown), the frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells was significantly greater than that of the other Ags within each age group (p values indicated in Fig. 1, C and D). Furthermore, there was a significant accumulation of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells (p = 0.02) and a decrease in the frequency of VZV-specific CD4 T cells (p = 0.02) in the old compared with the young groups.
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repertoire of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells like the CMV-specific CD8+ T cell population is highly restricted in both young and old subjects (data not shown). Unlike CMV-specific CD8+ T cells (8), these oligoclonal CMV-specific CD4+ T cells are functional as they secrete IFN-
. Since we use a functional readout to detect Ag-specific cells, it was not possible to analyze the characteristics of putative nonfunctional CMV-specific CD4+ T cell populations. The differentiation status of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells
The high frequency of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells suggested that they had proliferated extensively in vivo. Previous studies have suggested that that while all naive CD4+ T cells express the costimulatory receptors CD27 and CD28, upon repeated cycles of stimulation, these cells progressively lose first CD27 followed by CD28 (33). Highly differentiated CD4+T cells do not express either CD27 or CD28 (18). We first investigated the CD27/CD28 status of specific CD4+ populations that synthesize IFN-
after stimulation with the various Ags. All of these cells, irrespective of Ag used for stimulation, expressed CD45RO (data not shown). The total CD4+ T cell population in young (p < 0.006) and elderly (p < 0.0001) CMV-seropositive subjects contained significantly greater numbers of highly differentiated CD27CD28 T cells than CMV-seronegative groups (Fig. 2A), and the collated data are shown in Fig. 2, C and D. This was mainly due to the highly differentiated CMV-specific CD4+ T cells that were present (representative plots in Fig. 2B; collated data in Fig. 2, C and D). In young CMV-seropositive subjects, there were significantly more CD27CD28 CD4+ T cells within the CMV-specific pool compared with PPD (p < 0.0001)-, VZV (p < 0.0004)-, EBV (p < 0.04)-, and HSV-specific cells (p < 0.02; Fig. 2C). In the elderly CMV-seropositive group, CMV-specific CD4+ T cells were also more differentiated compared with PPD (p < 0.0001) and VZV-specific cells (p < 0.0002) and also the total CD4+ T cell pool (p < 0.001) but were no longer different from the EBV- and HSV-specific populations (Fig. 2D).
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CMV-specific CD4+ T cells have short telomeres
We sought additional evidence that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells were highly differentiated. Because highly differentiated T cells have shorter telomeres than less differentiated populations (5, 34), we modified previously described flow-FISH techniques (21) and developed a three-color flow-FISH technique for investigating telomere length in IFN-
-secreting, Ag-specific CD4+ T cells. An example of flow-FISH analysis is shown for PBMC stimulated with either CMV (Fig. 3A) or PPD (Fig. 3B), where cells gated on the basis of CD4 and IFN-
expression were then analyzed as histograms for the intensity of staining with the telomeric probe.
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Ag-specific CD4+ T cells in the young age group were shown to have significantly longer telomeres than the corresponding cells in old individuals (CMV, SEB, p < 0.0001; VZV, p = 0.004; PPD, p = 0.002; EBV, p = 0.01; and HSV, p = 0.02). We also found that there is a progressive decrease in telomere length during differentiation from a CD4+CD28+ CD27+ to CD4+CD28+CD27 to CD4+CD28CD27 T cell phenotype, indicating a direct link between accumulation of CD4+CD28CD27 T cells and the short telomeres found in the CMV-specific population (Fig. 3E). These results confirm that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells exhibit a late differentiated phenotype compared with other specific populations in young individuals and that this difference is maintained into old age.
CMV-induced IFN-
secretion by PDC accelerates phenotypic differentiation and telomere erosion in CD4+ T cells
Our results suggest that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells differentiate more rapidly than other populations of memory T cells. Although this may be due to the extent of CMV reactivation relative to other agents in vivo, the fact that there is also accelerated differentiation of non-CMV-specific T cells in CMV-seropositive individuals suggests that CMV may induce nonspecific factors that affect the rate of CD4+ T cell differentiation. Our previous studies show that IFN-
can accelerate the loss of costimulatory molecules in CD8+ T cells (35) and also inhibit telomerase activity in memory CD4+ T cell populations in vivo (22) and is therefore a candidate for such a factor. PDC are known to produce high levels if IFN-
in response to CMV (30), and we next investigated if production of these cytokines by PDC during stimulation of PBMC by CMV lysates in vitro could have a role in accelerating CD4+ T cell differentiation.
PDC were identified and isolated using the markers CD123 and BDCA-2 from whole PBMC populations (Fig. 4A). As shown in Fig. 4B, the incubation of unfractionated PBMC overnight with CMV-infected cell lysate resulted in the production of substantial levels of IFN-
(900 IU/ml) while a similar treatment with PPD did not. The CMV-induced IFN-
was produced by PDC since depletion of this population abrogated the IFN-
induction upon stimulation with CMV lysate that was restored by adding back the purified PDC population (Fig. 4, A and B). We next determined if we could induce PPD-specific CD4+ T cells that were relatively undifferentiated to resemble highly differentiated CMV-specific CD4+ populations by including IFN-
in the cultures during PPD stimulation. We found that 50 IU/ml IFN-
, which was substantially less than the concentration produced by CMV-stimulated PDC in vitro, induced the loss of both CD27 and CD28 in PPD-specific CD4+ T cells during specific stimulation in vitro (Fig. 4C). By 21 days, 25% of the cells had a CD27CD28 phenotype, compared with 3% in the absence of IFN-
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could accelerate telomere loss by inhibiting telomerase activity, we stimulated PPD-specific CD4+ T cells with PPD-pulsed, irradiated APC in the presence of medium alone, supernatants of PBMC that were stimulated with CMV lysate (diluted 1/4, containing
200 IU/ml IFN-
), or control supernatants of PBMC stimulated with PPD (containing no IFN-
) (Fig. 4D). Telomerase activity in 500 proliferating Ki67+ T cells per sample was assessed 4 days after stimulation. As shown in Fig. 4D, PPD stimulation induced telomerase activity in T cells (lane 1; 46 total product generated (TPG) units) that was significantly inhibited by the presence supernatant containing CMV-induced IFN (lane 2; 18 TPG units). The addition of the control supernatant, which contained no IFN-
, had no significant effect on telomerase activity (Fig. 4D, lane 5; 36 TPG units). The inhibitory effect of CMV supernatant on telomerase activity was abrogated by the addition of a neutralizing anti-IFN-
Ab (Fig. 4D, lane 3; 41 TPG units). Furthermore, the addition of anti-IFN-
Ab to stimulated cells in the presence of the control supernatant had no effect on telomerase activity (Fig. 4D, lane 6; 43 TPG units). The addition of an irrelevant isotype control Ab had no effect on telomerase activity (data not shown) (22). These results collectively suggest that CMV may activate both T-specific T cells and PDCs and that PDC-secreted IFN may be responsible in part for accelerating the differentiation of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells. In addition, our results suggest that such cytokines may also accelerate the differentiation of non-CMV-specific CD4+ T cell populations in a bystander fashion. This may explain the greater differentiation of non CMV-specific T cells in CMV-seropositive subjects. CMV-specific cells have reduced telomerase activity and replicative capacity
Our results suggested that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells may have reduced capacity to induce telomerase and that this may be one reason for their short telomeres. To investigate this further, we measured the ability of highly differentiated CD4+CD27CD28 T cells to up-regulate this enzyme after stimulation. These cells had markedly reduced ability to induce telomerase compared with other less differentiated subsets after polyclonal TCR stimulation (Fig. 5, A and B). This suggested that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells that are largely CD27CD28 have limited telomerase inducibility. To confirm this directly, we stimulated CD4+ T cells in individuals that had populations of CMV-, PPD-, tetanus-, VZV-, and SEB-specific cells with the respective Ags and measured the level of telomerase induction after stimulation (Fig. 5C). To normalize the telomerase activity relative to the extent of proliferation induced by the different Ags, we extracted the enzyme from an equivalent number of proliferating cells after simulation by the different Ags. After 4 days of stimulation, proliferating CMV-specific CD4+ T cells expressed very little telomerase relative to other Ag-specific CD4+ T cell populations (Fig. 5C). These results suggest that CMV-specific CD4+ T cell populations are susceptible to replicative senescence upon repeated stimulation since they have short telomeres and have lost their ability to induce telomerase after activation.
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| Discussion |
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The late differentiation phenotype exhibited by CMV-specific CD4+ T cells may result both from persistent reactivation of specific CD4+ T cells and because CMV and vial TLR also activate PDC to secrete differentiation-inducing cytokines such as IFN-
(30, 37). We found that IFN-
secreted by PDC that were stimulated by CMV lysate could inhibit telomerase activity and also induce the loss of costimulatory molecules by Ag-activated CD4+ T cells in vitro. This effect is not restricted to CD4+ T cells, and this cytokine also accelerates the phenotypic differentiation of activated CD8+ T cells in vitro (35). An interesting observation was that in CMV-seropositive subjects, CD4+ T cells that were specific for an array of non-CMV Ags were more likely to have lost expression of costimulatory molecules. Because PDC are found in T cell areas of lymph nodes (38), local CMV reactivation and high IFN-
secretion induction may exert bystander effects on the differentiation of T cells of any specificity that are stimulated locally (39).
IFN-
may not be the only cytokine involved in accelerating T cell differentiation during CMV reactivation. TNF-
, another cytokine that is induced at high concentration by CMV (40), has also been shown to down-regulate CD28 expression by disrupting transcription factor assembly (41). The mechanism of telomerase inhibition by IFN-
may occur in part at the transcriptional level (42) and is the subject of ongoing studies. Additional support for the role of IFN-
in the acceleration of T cell differentiation comes from a study showing that hepatitis C virus-infected individuals on IFN-
therapy displayed increased proportions of CD8+ T cells with a CD28 phenotype (43). The effect of CMV infection on the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-
is a potential link between the observed raised levels of proinflammatory cytokines and extreme T cell differentiation, which are part of the IRP (12, 13, 44, 45).
The demonstration that there is substantial telomere erosion and loss of replicative capacity of CMV-specific T cells has to be reconciled with the observation that there is an increase rather than a decrease in the number of CMV-specific T cells during aging (16, 17, 32). Clonal expansions within the CD8+ T cell pool have been described in elderly subjects (14, 46), and these cells have been shown recently to be CMV specific (17, 47). We now show that there are expansions of CMV-specific CD4+ T cells in these individuals. A large proportion of CMV-specific CD8+ T cells have a suboptimal function suggesting that the clonal populations that accumulate may be inefficient at controlling the virus (8). We were not able to address this in the present study because we used a functional assay (IFN-
secretion) to measure Ag-specific T cells. The dysfunctional CMV-specific CD8+ T cells that accumulate in elderly subjects may arise as a result of clonal evolution within CMV-specific T cell populations during lifelong persistent infection. It has been proposed that clones with the highest avidity and/or functional capacity that are present early in the response are lost and replaced by other cells with lower avidity (48, 49, 50). A possible reason for the clonal accumulation may be because a greater number of inefficient CMV-specific T cells are required for virus control in elderly subjects since the most efficient populations may have been exhausted through persistent virus reactivation. The presence of CD8+ T cell clones in elderly individuals may also be related to the resistance of these cells to apoptosis (51, 52). However, our results indicate that oligoclonal populations of functional CMV-specific CD4+ T cells have low Bcl-2 and are susceptible to death (our unpublished observations). Taken together, these data suggest a model where telomere erosion in highly differentiated CMV-specific T cells drives clonal evolution so that those with low avidity and suboptimal functional capacity accumulate in elderly subjects (5).
All these observations point to the key question of why CMV infection and the IRP are associated with decreased survival of elderly individuals. Although extreme differentiation, telomere erosion, and replicative senescence of specific T cells may shape the CMV-specific T cell repertoire, the IRP is not due to loss of CMV-specific immunity because pathological CMV reactivation has not been reported in elderly subjects. However, patients with dyskeratosis congenita who have a defect in the telomerase gene or a telomerase-associated protein dyskerin experience CMV pneumonitis (53). This suggests that lack of telomerase activity in CMV-specific T cells may eventually lead to the premature loss of immunity to this virus and suggests that this requires further study in elderly subjects.
Another explanation for the detrimental effect of CMV infection in old age is that expanded suboptimal clones of CMV-specific T cells may smother other smaller memory T cell populations through competition for space or growth factors (5). Because the memory repertoire in elderly individuals cannot be efficiently replenished by naive thymic precursors, reactivation of silent viruses such as VZV, which causes shingles in elderly subjects (1), may occur when the overall frequency of virus-specific T cells falls below a certain threshold (5). Our observation that CMV-specific CD4+ T cells are increased significantly while VZV-specific populations are significantly decreased in elderly subjects supports this possibility. Furthermore, CMV seropositivity is correlated with reduced EBV-specific T cell responses in old age (54). Conclusive evidence that clonal expansions of specific T cells may compromise the response to other Ags by shrinking the remaining T cell repertoire was provided by a recent study in mice (55). It was observed that reduced T cell diversity and a functional inability to mobilize parts of the T cell repertoire was induced by expanded T cell clones in vivo (55). This suggests that the negative impact of CMV seropositivity and the IRP on survival in the elderly may be due in part to congestion of the immune system with clonally expanded CMV-specific T cells with suboptimal function that hinder the normal function of other memory populations.
The accumulating data highlighting the detrimental effect of CMV infection, especially in elderly individuals, suggests that it may be important to consider ways of controlling CMV replication either with vaccines or with specific drugs (56). A crucial question that remains to be answered is when should such therapy be initiated to impart maximum benefit for elderly subjects.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was funded by the Henry Smiths Charity (to J.M.F.), the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Experimental Research into Aging Initiative (to M.V.-S.), Research into Ageing (to J.E.C. and S.E.J.), the Sir Jules Thorn Charitable Trust (to K.E.B.), Dermatrust (to K.E.B. and P.J.D.), and the Edward Jenner Institute for Vaccine Research (to P.J.D.). ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Prof. Arne N. Akbar, Division of Infection and Immunity, University College London, London W1T 4JF, U.K. E-mail address: a.akbar{at}ucl.ac.uk ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: VZV, varicella zoster virus; IRP, immune risk phenotype; PPD, purified protein derivative; flow-FISH, flow cytometric detection of fluorescence in situ hybridization; PDC, plasmacytoid dendritic cell; PD, population doubling; SEB, staphylococcal enterotoxin B; TPG, total product generated. ![]()
Received for publication June 9, 2005. Accepted for publication September 27, 2005.
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M. Thewissen, V. Somers, N. Hellings, J. Fraussen, J. Damoiseaux, and P. Stinissen CD4+CD28null T Cells in Autoimmune Disease: Pathogenic Features and Decreased Susceptibility to Immunoregulation J. Immunol., November 15, 2007; 179(10): 6514 - 6523. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Vescovini, C. Biasini, F. F. Fagnoni, A. R. Telera, L. Zanlari, M. Pedrazzoni, L. Bucci, D. Monti, M. C. Medici, C. Chezzi, et al. Massive Load of Functional Effector CD4+ and CD8+ T Cells against Cytomegalovirus in Very Old Subjects J. Immunol., September 15, 2007; 179(6): 4283 - 4291. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. A. Bolovan-Fritts, R. N. Trout, and S. A. Spector High T-cell response to human cytomegalovirus induces chemokine-mediated endothelial cell damage Blood, September 15, 2007; 110(6): 1857 - 1863. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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I. R. Humphreys, A. Loewendorf, C. de Trez, K. Schneider, C. A. Benedict, M. W. Munks, C. F. Ware, and M. Croft OX40 Costimulation Promotes Persistence of Cytomegalovirus-Specific CD8 T Cells: A CD4-Dependent Mechanism J. Immunol., August 15, 2007; 179(4): 2195 - 2202. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. Pourgheysari, N. Khan, D. Best, R. Bruton, L. Nayak, and P. A. H. Moss The Cytomegalovirus-Specific CD4+ T-Cell Response Expands with Age and Markedly Alters the CD4+ T-Cell Repertoire J. Virol., July 15, 2007; 81(14): 7759 - 7765. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. J. Plunkett, O. Franzese, H. M. Finney, J. M. Fletcher, L. L. Belaramani, M. Salmon, I. Dokal, D. Webster, A. D. G. Lawson, and A. N. Akbar The Loss of Telomerase Activity in Highly Differentiated CD8+CD28-CD27- T Cells Is Associated with Decreased Akt (Ser473) Phosphorylation J. Immunol., June 15, 2007; 178(12): 7710 - 7719. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. N. Akbar and M. Vukmanovic-Stejic Telomerase in T Lymphocytes: Use It and Lose It? J. Immunol., June 1, 2007; 178(11): 6689 - 6694. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. Khan, D. Best, R. Bruton, L. Nayak, A. B. Rickinson, and P. A. H. Moss T Cell Recognition Patterns of Immunodominant Cytomegalovirus Antigens in Primary and Persistent Infection J. Immunol., April 1, 2007; 178(7): 4455 - 4465. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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E C Kim and T P Margolis Hypertensive iridocyclitis Br J Ophthalmol, July 1, 2006; 90(7): 812 - 813. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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