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* Department of Microbiology,
Department of Pediatrics, and
Department of Neurobiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Alabama 35294; and
Department of Embryology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia
| Abstract |
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and TNF-
but not IL-2 following peptide stimulation. Moreover, adoptive transfer of brain mononuclear cells resulted in decreased virus burden in immunodepleted MCMV-infected syngeneic mice. Depletion of the CD8+ cell population following transfer eliminated control of virus replication. In summary, these results show that functionally mature virus-specific CD8+ T cells are recruited to the CNS in mice infected with MCMV as neonates. | Introduction |
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Immunological control of HCMV infection has been studied extensively in immunocompromised allograft recipients and more recently in patients with HIV infections (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13). These studies have demonstrated a critical role of adaptive immune responses including cytolytic and noncytolytic antiviral activities mediated through virus-specific CD8+ and CD4+ lymphocytes (10, 11, 13). Early studies suggested that congenitally infected infants lacked or had blunted HCMV-specific T lymphocyte responses during infancy and restoration of these responses resulted in decreased virus shedding, findings consistent with the view that fetuses and newborn infants were susceptible to HCMV infection secondary to the immaturity of their immune responses (8, 14, 15, 16, 17). Yet extremes in the phenotypic expression of disease in congenitally infected infants, particularly in regard to the CNS infection, suggested that other determinants of virus infection and host responses also influence the outcome of this infection. In addition, more recent studies have documented HCMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ responses in premature newborn infants and young infants, suggesting that results from previous studies of T lymphocyte responses of young infants to HCMV require reinterpretation in light of more current assays of adaptive immune responses (18). Thus, it is unclear whether the developmental immaturity of the immune system can entirely explain the susceptibility of the developing fetus to CNS infection.
Virus neutralizing Abs have been demonstrated to play a key role in limiting dissemination of virus in MCMV-infected animals (19, 20). Protective functions of virus-specific CD8+ and CD4+ lymphocyte responses similar to those in humans have been well documented in MCMV infections (21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26). In contrast to the human infection, an extensive literature has shown that NK cells contribute to protective responses during MCMV infections (27, 28, 29). Although much has been learned from the study of innate and adaptive immune responses to HCMV and MCMV in the control of virus replication and persistence, the immunological responses that control and resolve CNS infections have not been sufficiently studied.
To define key steps in virus spread to the CNS and clearance of HCMV infection from the CNS, we developed a murine model of CNS infection with HCMV. In this model, newborn mice are infected by i.p. inoculation of tissue culture- derived MCMV. Infectious virus can be detected in the liver and spleen several days after infection and, subsequently, virus can be recovered from the CNS. The histopathology of the CNS infection closely resembles that of the human infection with scattered foci of virus-infected cells associated with infiltrating mononuclear cells throughout the brain (30, 31). This infection is associated with an intense inflammatory response in the CNS and developmental abnormalities in the hindbrain (32). Similar to the infection in peripheral organs such as the spleen and liver, virus replication is controlled in the CNS and infection is resolved by postnatal (PN) day 21.
In this report, we have described host responses that contribute to the clearance of virus from the CNS in MCMV-infected mice, specifically cellular components of adaptive immunity. Our findings demonstrate a critical role for MCMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes in the resolution of this infection. Interestingly, the CD8+ T lymphocyte response in the CNS of infected animals increased throughout the infection, whereas the CD4+ T lymphocyte response was minimal at all time points. Brain CD8+ T cells displayed an activated phenotype and up-regulated IFN-
and TNF-
expression following cognate peptide stimulation. These results suggested an important role for MCMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes in the control and clearance of virus infection from the CNS of young animals.
| Materials and Methods |
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Pathogen-free male and female BALB/c mice were purchased from Charles River Laboratories. All breedings and experiments were done in accordance with the guidelines of the University of Alabama Birmingham-University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and with the University of Rijeka-Croatia animal use policies.
Virus and infection
For production of virus stocks, the Smith stain of MCMV (ATCC VR-194; American Type Tissue Culture) was propagated in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Infectious virus was detected as previously described (21). Organs were homogenized and virus quantitated by plaque assay. Virus titers are expressed as PFUs and correspond to the amount of infectious virus per gram tissue or per organ. Newborn pups (6–18 h postpartum) were inoculated i.p. with 200 PFU of tissue culture passaged MCMV Smith strain.
Quantification of MCMV using real-time PCR
Animals were sacrificed and then perfused with ice-cold PBS. Organs were dissected and frozen at –70°C. Total DNA from brain, liver, and spleen was isolated using a Qiagen QIAMP DNA kit as per the manufacturers instructions. Quantitative real-time PCR was performed using TaqMan chemistry by amplification of a fragment of immediate-early 1 (IE1) exon 4 using the primers forward, 5'-GGC TCC ATG ATC CAC CCT GTT A-3' and reverse, 5'-GCC TTC ATC TGC TGC CAT ACT-3'. The probe (5'-AGC CTT TCC TGG ATG CCA GGT CTC A-3') was labeled with reporter dye FAM and quencher dye TAMRA. To quantify viral genome copy number, serial dilutions (log10) of a plasmid with the cloned IE1 exon 4 PCR product was used to create a standard curve. Quantitative real-time PCR was conducted using ABgene ABSOLUTE QPCR Low ROX master mix. Samples were run in duplicate using a two-step amplification protocol on the Bio-Rad iCycler.
Isolation of mononuclear cells
Brain mononuclear cells were isolated using a previously described protocol (33). Briefly, mice were sacrificed and perfused with cold PBS. Under sterile conditions, each brain was collected in RPMI 1640/1% FCS and mechanically dissociated. A 30% Percoll/brain homogenate suspension was underlaid with 1 ml of 70% Percoll in DMEM and then centrifuged at 1050 x g for 30 min at 4°C. Cells in the interphase were collected and washed in RPMI 1640/1% FCS and resuspended in FACS buffer or in RPMI 1640-10% FCS. Liver mononuclear cells were isolated according to a previously described protocol with some modifications (34). Briefly, liver lobes were collected in 1% RPMI 1640 and dissociated by forcing the tissue through a steel gauze (Alfa Aesar). Dissociated tissue was incubated in collagenase (0.02%) and in DNase (0.002%) at 37°C for 30 min. Undigested tissue was removed by using a 70-µm filter and mononuclear cells isolated by step-gradient Percoll centrifugation as described above. Splenocytes were isolated as previously described (35).
Flow cytometry
Isolated cell populations were stained in FACS buffer (2% BSA and 0.2% sodium azide) for 30 min at 4°C in the dark and fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde. Samples were acquired using a FACSCalibur (BD Biosciences). CD8
-allophycocyanin, CD8
-PE, CD4-FITC, F4/80-allophycocyanin, CD45-PE, CD45-FITC, CD69-PE, CD44-FITC, CD62L-FITC, CD49d-PE, CD40-PE, CD80-PE, IFN-
-FITC, TNF-
-PE, IL-2-PE. and CD107a-PE were purchased from eBioscience. Allophycocyanin-conjugated H-2Ld-IE1168–176 tetramers were obtained from the National Institutes of Health Tetramer Core Facility (Emory University, Atlanta, GA). All analysis was performed using WINMDI 2.9 and GraphPad Prism 4.
Intracellular cytokine stains
Ex vivo stimulations were performed as previously described (35). For detection of cytokine production, cell isolates were resuspended in RPMI 1640 (10% FCS and 50 µM 2-ME) and then stimulated with 10 µM IE1168–176 peptide (BioSynthesis) or with PMA/ionomycin (Sigma-Aldrich) for 6 h at 37°C with brefeldin A added in the last 4 h of stimulation. Surface stainings were done as described above and intracellular staining was performed as per the manufacturers instructions (BD Biosciences). For detection of degranulation by CD8+ T cells, CD107a-PE mAb (eBioscience) was added to the cultured cells during peptide stimulation. Samples were analyzed by flow cytometry as described above.
BrdU incorporation
CD8 T cell proliferation in vivo was performed by detecting for BrdU (BD Biosciences) incorporation by flow cytometry. Mice were treated i.p. with 0.2 mg of BrdU for 6 h before sacrifice. Staining and processing of samples for detection of BrdU incorporation were performed as previously described (36).
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemical staining for MCMV IE1 encoded protein, microglia/macrophages, and CD8+ and CD4+ T cells was performed using mAbs Croma 101 (anti-EI1), anti-mouse Mac3 (BD Biosciences), YTS 169.4.2 (anti-CD8), and YTS 191.2.1 (anti-CD4), respectively. Both paraffin embedded and frozen sections were used for staining. Ab binding was visualized using biotinylated goat anti-mouse IgG, mouse anti-rat IgG2a (BD Biosciences), and goat anti-rat IgG (Caltag Laboratories) secondary Abs and then visualized by streptavidin peroxidase and AEC (Sigma-Aldrich) and counterstained with Shandon instant hematoxylin.
Adoptive transfers
Six-week-old BALB/c mice infected as newborns with wild-type MCMV were used as donors and 6-wk-old age-matched female BALB/c mice served as recipients. Recipient mice were subjected to total body gamma irradiation in a single dose of 6 Gy. Twelve hours after irradiation, mice were infected s.c. in the footpad with 105 PFU of wild-type MCMV (MW 97.01 strain). CNS mononuclear cells were isolated using previously described protocols (37). Isolated cells were resuspended in DMEM and 2 x 105 cells were transferred i.v. into immunodepleted mice. Depletion of CD8+ T cell subsets was performed by i.p. treatment of recipient mice with anti-CD8 mAb (clone YTS 169.4.2) on days 0 and 6 after transfer. On day 9 after transfer, recipient mice were sacrificed and virus titers were quantitated as described above.
Ab depletion of CD8+ cells
Control and MCMV-infected animals were treated i.p. with 50 µg of anti-CD8 mAb (YTS.169.4.2) at PN days 5 and 8 and then at PN day 11 with 100 µg of mAb. All animals used for flow cytometry and for quantitation of virus loads were sacrificed at PN day 13. Tissues were processed as described above.
| Results |
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Following i.p. inoculation of newborn mice with MCMV, infectious virus was initially detected in the liver and spleen and then in the CNS (Fig. 1A). Infectious virus was first detected in the liver on PN day 3 and titers plateaued between PN day 10 and PN day 14 (Fig. 1A). Infectious virus was first detected in the brain by PN day 7 and the titers of infectious virus peaked in the brain between PN days 11 and 14 (Fig. 1A). Virus replication reached similar levels in the brain as was observed in the liver with peak titers ranging between 4 and 5 log10 of virus/g of tissue (Fig. 1A). The infection in the CNS was characterized by scattered foci of infiltrating mononuclear cells resulting in lesions that appeared nearly indistinguishable from histopathological findings in infants with congenital HCMV infections and adults with HCMV encephalitis (30) (Fig. 1, B–D). Virus-infected cells could be detected in parenchyma of the brain (Fig. 1, E and F) and in the liver (Fig. 1G) by immunohistochemistry (IHC) using a mAb reactive with the major IE1 protein (pp89) of MCMV. Sections from the brain and liver of control animals displayed no evidence of mAb reactivity (data not shown).
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CD8+ T lymphocytes contribute to the control of virus replication in the CNS of young mice infected with MCMV
MCMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes have been shown to be required for MCMV clearance from infected adult animals (22, 26). The dominance of CD8+ T cells in the CNS of MCMV-infected newborn mice suggested that these cells also played an important role in virus clearance from this organ. Plotting the CD8+ T cell frequency vs virus infectivity as a function of days postinfection revealed an abrupt decline in infectious virus congruent with the increasing frequency of CD8+ T lymphocytes in the CNS, whereas no such correlation is observed between CD4+ T cells and infectious virus titer (Fig. 3). In the liver, increasing frequencies of both CD4+ and CD8+ subsets were observed along with a rapid drop in virus titer (Fig. 3). These results suggested that the control of virus replication in the developing brain was in part mediated by CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes.
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30% mortality in MCMV-infected and untreated animals at this time point (Fig. 4C). These studies demonstrated that CD8+ T lymphocytes played a significant role in the clearance and control of MCMV infection in newborn animals, including in the CNS.
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The surface phenotype of CNS and liver CD8+ T cell infiltrates from MCMV-infected newborn animals were characterized. CD8+ T lymphocytes infiltrating the CNS on PN day 14 expressed high levels of CD44, and CD69, with 97.1% of CD8+ T lymphocytes expressing both Ags (Fig. 5A). Late in infection and after virus clearance from the CNS (PN day 28), brain CD8+ T lymphocytes maintained high levels of expression of CD44 and CD69 (Fig. 5A). CD8+ T lymphocytes isolated from the liver at PN day 14 were also CD44posCD69pos (76.0%) with a small fraction (19.0%) lacking CD69 expression (Fig. 5A). Late in infection, liver CD8+ T lymphocytes displayed a modest increase in the CD44posCD69neg population to 29.0% (Fig. 5A).
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4 integrin) and CD62L (L-selectin) expression was also determined. CD49d is up-regulated on activated lymphocytes and has been shown to be critical for T lymphocyte infiltration into the CNS in mice with inflammatory CNS disease while CD62L is down-regulated following extravasation of lymphocytes into infected organs. On PN day 14, CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes were almost exclusively CD49dposCD62Lneg (84.2%) with a small fraction being positive for both cell surface markers (12.6%; Fig. 5A). On PN day 28, most CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes were CD49dposCD62Lneg (93.0%). The up-regulation of CD44, CD69, and CD49d and the loss of CD62L surface expression on CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes early in infection indicated that these cells exhibited an activated effector phenotype and suggested that these cells were primarily effector T lymphocytes throughout PN days 14–28, an interval when virus replication was controlled and reduced to undetectable levels in the CNS (Fig. 1A). We also analyzed the phenotype of mononuclear phagocytes in the CNS. These cells mediate T cell responses by providing costimulatory signals necessary for T cell effector function. Microglia and infiltrating brain macrophages displayed an activated phenotype as shown by the up-regulation of the activation markers CD40 and CD80 (Fig. 5B). A higher frequency of F4/80posCD45high cells (brain macrophages) expressed CD80 (68.1%) than did F4/80posCD45int cells (activated microglia, 48.6%; Fig. 5B). However, virtually no difference in CD40 expression was observed between both populations. Quiescent microglia displayed very low levels of expression of both activation Ags.
CD8+ T lymphocytes isolated from the brains of MCMV-infected newborn animals are specific against viral Ag IE1
We next examined the specificity of CD8+ T lymphocytic infiltrates in the CNS. The IE1 exon 4168–176 (IE1168) epitope has been shown to be an immunodominant epitope recognized by CD8+ T lymphocytes from H-2d mice and CD8+ T lymphocytes reactive with this epitope are protective in virus challenge studies (39, 40). Using H-2Ld tetramers generated with the IE1168 peptide, we analyzed the frequency of IE1-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes in the CNS and liver (Fig. 6A). At the peak of virus replication (PN day 14), IE1168-specific CD8+ T lymphocyte frequency in the CNS was 8.0% and increased to 10 and 11.5% on PN days 18 and 22, respectively (Fig. 6B). By PN day 28, the frequency of IE1168-specific CD8+ T lymphocyte in the CNS had decreased to 7% (Fig. 6B). The frequency of IE1168-specific CD8+ T lymphocyte in the liver remained constant from PN days 14–22 but by 28 days post infection a similar reduction in the frequency of IE1168-specific CD8+ T lymphocyte was noted in the liver (Fig. 6B). CD8+ T lymphocytes specific for two other previously described CD8+ T lymphocyte epitopes present in MCMV, m164 and m04, were also detected in the CNS at PN day 14, albeit at much lower frequencies, 2.5 and 2.2%, respectively (41, 42) (data not shown).
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production
Cytokine production by virus-specific T lymphocytes can mirror the capacity of these effector cells to effectively control virus infection (43). We determined the capacity of infiltrating CD8+ T lymphocytes isolated from the CNS and liver of neonatal MCMV-infected mice to produce IFN-
following ex vivo peptide stimulation. Stimulation with IE1168 peptide resulted in the increased expression of IFN-
by both liver and brain CD8+ T lymphocytes at each time point (Fig. 7, A and B). The frequency of peptide stimulated IFN-
posCD8+ T lymphocytes was highest early in infection with a gradual decline in IFN-
posCD8+ T lymphocyte frequency as virus infection was cleared from both brain and liver (Fig. 7B). Following nonspecific chemical stimulation with PMA/ionomycin, IFN-
posCD8+ T lymphocyte frequency in the CNS remained relatively high (>50%), whereas there was a decline in IFN-
posCD8+ T lymphocyte frequency after PMA/Ionomycin stimulation in liver CD8+ T cells (Fig. 7C). The maintenance of cell surface activation markers on brain CD8+ T lymphocytes (Fig. 5A) and the continued capacity for IFN-
production late in infection suggested that CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes present in the CNS of MCMV-infected mice maintained an activated effector/effector memory phenotype even following virus clearance as measured by PCR detection of viral nucleic acid.
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following peptide stimulation of both brain- and liver-derived CD8+ T lymphocytes. The frequency of IFN-
pos and IE1168posCD8+ T lymphocytes from both brain and liver infiltrates were compared between PN days 14–22. There was no statistically significant difference in the frequency of IFN-
pos and IE1168posCD8+ T lymphocytes in the brain and liver on PN days 14 and 18 (Fig. 7D). However, on PN day 22, there was a significant difference (p = 0.0159) between the frequency of IFN-
pos (5.1 ± 0.38%) and IE1168pos (10.9 ± 0.7%) CD8+ T lymphocyte in the CNS, whereas no difference was observed in the frequency of IFN-
pos and IE1168posCD8+ T lymphocytes (2.5 ± 0.66% and 5.85 ± 1.4% (p = 0.144), respectively) in the liver at this time point (Fig. 7D). Although this difference in the frequency of IFN-
pos and IE1168posCD8+ T lymphocytes in the CNS was small and potentially could be explained by variation between animals in these two groups, this result did raise the possibility that the CNS microenvironment contributed to an altered function of activated CD8+ T lymphocytes after control of virus infection. Early CD8+ effector T cells from brain and liver exhibit functionally heterogeneous phenotypes
Although we have demonstrated recruitment of activated virus-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes to the CNS, given the unique microenvironment of the brain, CD8+ T cell-mediated MCMV clearance mechanisms in the brain could differ from that of peripheral organs. Moreover, the observed differences in IFN-
production and activation profiles between brain and liver CD8+ T cells prompted us to examine potential disparities in the function of brain and liver CD8+ lymphocyte populations during the early phase of the T lymphocyte response (PN days 13 and 14). Mononuclear cellular isolates from PN day 14 animals were stimulated with IE1168 peptide or with PMA/ionomycin then stained with IFN-
, TNF-
, and IL-2. The majority of brain CD8+ T cells simultaneously expressed IFN-
and TNF-
, following either peptide or PMA/ionomycin stimulation. The ratio between IFN-
and TNF-
double-positive cells and IFN-
single-positive cells following stimulation with IE1168 peptide or PMA/ionomycin was 2 and 4, respectively (Fig. 8A). Liver CD8+ T cells had a strikingly different phenotype as compared with brain CD8+ T cells following peptide or PMA/ionomycin stimulation, with the cytokine production ratio measuring <1 (Fig. 8A).
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To test for differences in Ag driven proliferation between brain and liver CD8+ T cells, PN day 13 MCMV-infected pups were pulsed with BrdU for 6 h. A higher fraction of liver CD8+ T cells incorporated BrdU (>50%) compared with brain CD8+ T cells (30%), suggesting that a greater proportion of CD8+ T cells were proliferating in the liver (Fig. 8B). By staining with IE1168 tetramer and for BrdU incorporation, we also observed a higher fraction of BrdU+IE1168+ T cells in the liver (82%) than the CNS (30%; Fig. 8B). This difference in in vivo Ag-driven proliferation between brain and liver IE1-specific T cells raised the possibility that intrinsic differences between brain and liver CD8+ T cells limited the capacity of the former to proliferate in response to Ag. Alternatively, this difference could be secondary to expression of extrinsic factors in the CNS microenvironment that modulated Ag-induced proliferation. However, these differences in proliferative capacity were potentially transient during the acute phase of MCMV infection since adoptive transfer of PN day 42 brain CD8+ T cells into immunodepleted, MCMV-infected adult mice was protective and resulted in reduced virus replication, suggesting that brain CD8+ T cells were able to proliferate in response to "secondary" virus challenge (Fig. 9).
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To further characterize the functionality of early effector CD8+ T cells in brain and liver, we estimated the cytotoxic potential of CNS and liver CD8+ T cells by staining mononuclear cell isolates from PN day 14 animals with CD107a (LAMP-1) during ex vivo IE1 peptide stimulation (44). CD8+ T cells double positive for CD107a and IFN-
were observed from both peptide-stimulated CNS (1.4%) and liver (3.1%) mononuclear cells (Fig. 8C). Due to the absence of double-positive populations in nonstimulated animals, the detection of IFN-
posCD107apos cells in both brain and liver CD8+ T cells suggested that degranulation of these cells occurred after interaction with the MHC-peptide complex. An equivalent fraction of liver CD8+ T cells was shown to only secrete IFN-
(3.4%); however, this population was increased 2-fold in brain CD8+ T cells (2.8%; Fig. 8C), suggesting that a considerable fraction of both neonatal liver and brain CD8+ T cells was deficient in degranulation and potentially lacked the capacity to mediate cytolysis of target cells (45). Interestingly, a sizeable fraction of CD8+ T cells in the CNS were IFN-
negCD107apos without ex vivo stimulation (3.6%,;Fig. 8C). There was no change in the frequency of this population following peptide stimulation (4.1%). Whether degranulation was taking place against viral Ags processed by infected APCs requires further investigation. Overall, these results indicated that CD8+ T cells recruited to the CNS and to the liver had functionally distinct properties, perhaps secondary to unique signals that T cells receive following extravasation into these specific organs.
CD8+ T lymphocytes isolated from the brain of MCMV-infected mice have in vivo antiviral activity
The antiviral effector capacity of CD8+ T lymphocytes isolated from the brains of MCMV-infected mice was determined by assaying the antiviral activity of CNS CD8+ T lymphocytes from infected animals by adoptive transfer into syngeneic MCMV-infected, gamma-irradiated animals, a model that has been used extensively to assay the in vivo functionality of MCMV-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes (46). Adoptive transfer of immune splenocytes from age-matched adult animals that were infected as neonates reduced virus titer in the spleen by >3 log10 and in the lungs and liver by 1 and 3 log10, respectively (Fig. 9). Similarly, adoptive transfer of CNS mononuclear cells from neonatally infected, age-matched animals reduced virus titer in the spleen by 2 log10 and in the lungs and liver by 1 log10 (Fig. 9). Depletion of CD8+ T lymphocytes by anti-CD8 mAb treatment of gamma-irradiated recipients eliminated control of virus replication by donor CNS mononuclear cells and resulted in virus titers equivalent to those of control animals that did not receive adoptively transferred cells (Fig. 9). An increase in the titer of infectious virus was observed in all organs when CD8+ cells were depleted following transfer of immune splenocytes; however, it appeared that immune effector mechanisms other than CD8+ T lymphocytes could also limit MCMV growth to a lesser extent. These findings suggested that CD8+ T lymphocytes recruited into CNS following neonatal infection were functional and could limit virus replication in vivo.
| Discussion |
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CD8+ T cells control virus infection by cytolytic (perforin, granzyme, Fas ligand mediated) and noncytolytic means (cytokine mediated). Recent studies of fetuses infected with HCMV revealed MHC class I-restricted T cells with cytolytic activity against peptide-pulsed target cells and production of IFN-
, TNF-
, and MIP-1
following ex vivo Ag stimulation, suggesting a role for both pathways in the CD8+ T cell response to CMV infection (18). In mice, the effector mechanisms necessary for CD8+ T cell control of MCMV infection remain unresolved. IFN-
and TNF-
have been shown to act synergistically in controlling MCMV replication (49). Both cytokines however are produced by multiple cell types, including NK cells, which have also been reported to mediate virus clearance, suggesting that IFN-
and TNF-
could represent effector molecules in both innate and adaptive responses to MCMV. Additionally, in vivo cytotoxicity assays have revealed cytolytic activity of IE1-specific T lymphocytes during acute infection of adult animals, but mice with genetic deletions for cytolysis effector molecules such as perforin, granzyme A, and Fas ligand exhibited defects in cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated control of virus infection only in the salivary glands (50, 51, 52). Together, these data suggest that the cytolytic function of CD8+ T cells could be specific for virus clearance only in some organs but not others.
CD8+ T cells from the CNS of neonatally infected animals produced both IFN-
and TNF-
but not IL-2 following ex vivo peptide stimulation. The potential for CD8+ T cells to simultaneously produce TNF-
and IFN-
has been observed in acute MCMV-infected adult mice and in healthy HCMV-infected individuals (50, 53, 54). Double producers of TNF-
and IFN-
synthesize more cytokines than single-positive cells, thereby potentially functioning more efficiently in virus clearance (55). Moreover, cytokine-dependent virus clearance mechanisms are thought to be critical for control of virus infection in postmitotic, nongenerating cell populations such as neurons (56). In animals infected with measles virus or Sindbis virus, control of virus replication in infected neurons is mediated by IFN-
via noncytolytic mechanisms (57, 58). In addition, although we observed degranulation of cytolytic granules in CNS-infiltrating CD8+ T cells, there was no observable difference in the frequency of apoptotic cells in the virus-infected brain compared with control animals (data not shown). Consistent with these findings, CNS CD8+ T cells displayed 2-fold higher frequencies of IFN-
posCD107aneg cells. Given the importance of both cytokines in host response to MCMV infection, the increased proportion of TNF-
and IFN-
double-positive CD8+ T cells and the higher frequency of IE1168 peptide-specific IFN-
posCD107aneg T cells in the CNS suggested a major role of noncytolytic virus clearance mechanisms in the control of MCMV infection in the CNS. Nevertheless, an active role of CD8+ CTL-mediated cytotoxicity in the brain has been observed in mouse models of CNS virus infections. For example, clearance of West Nile virus from infected neurons is dependent on perforin (59). Indeed, CD107a single-positive cells were observed in CNS CD8+ T cell infiltrates and to a lesser extent in liver infiltrates. Since multiple cell types (microglia, neurons, astrocytes, and neural stem cells) are readily infected by MCMV, it is possible that each cell type requires a specific CD8+ T cell effector mechanism to mediate control of virus replication. Thus, CD8+ T cell-mediated clearance of MCMV from the CNS could depend on multiple effector functions.
A focused CD8+ T cell response in the brain was observed in MCMV-infected newborn mice. Approximately 10% of CD8+ T lymphocytes in the CNS were specific against a single epitope, IE1168. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte specificity against the IE1168 epitope has been extensively studied in H-2D mice and immune dominance demonstrated in MCMV-infected adult mice (39, 40). Whether, IE1-specific CTLs are truly immune dominant in the CNS remains to be shown. Recent studies using H-2b mice demonstrated that splenic CD8+ T lymphocytes respond to 27 unique viral genes, indicating that the repertoire of CD8+ T lymphocyte reactivity to MCMV is extensive (60). Thus, effector T cells against other viral epitopes could account for the remaining CD8+ T cells in the CNS, although recruitment of bystander (CNS Ag-specific) T cells was also a possibility (61). Using tetramer staining, we have also detected CD8+ T cells in the CNS specific against MCMV m164 and M04. Both epitopes have been shown to mediate virus clearance in MCMV-infected mice (41, 42).
Infiltrating CNS T cells exhibited decreased proliferation compared with liver CD8+ T cells early in infection as shown by the lower fraction of IE1168-specific CD8+ T cells in the CNS that incorporated BrdU. In addition, we observed that there was a significant difference in the frequency of IE1168 tetramer- positive CD8+ T lymphocytes in the CNS as compared with the frequency of CD8+ T lymphocytes that produced IFN-
following ex vivo stimulation with peptide. Such a deficit was not observed in IE1168-specific T cells isolated from the liver. Admittedly, this result was based on a small number of animals and variations between animals in each group could also explain these differences in the frequency of tetramer and IFN-
CD8+ T cells. However, these differences in the Ag-specific response between brain and liver CTLs could also be the result of the proposed, inherently immune inhibitory microenvironment of the CNS or possibly secondary to a specific phenotype of CD8+ T lymphocytes that infiltrates the CNS (62). Additional experiments with larger groups of animals will be necessary to validate these findings and to explore potential mechanisms responsible for the observed phenotypes of CD8+ T lymphocytes in the brains of infected mice following clearance of infectious virus. In experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a small animal model for multiple sclerosis, inhibition of T cell activation, and proliferation in the CNS can be mediated by inhibitory B7/CD28 family members such as CTLA-4 and PD-1 (63, 64) or by certain anti-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-10 and TGF-β (65, 66). Interestingly, TGF-β is constitutively expressed in the developing CNS (67) (data not shown) and has been shown to be up-regulated by MCMV-infected astrocytes (68). A putative role for these molecules in regulation of T cell responses in the virus-infected newborn brain could offer insight into potential mechanisms for limiting immune-mediated pathology in the developing CNS.
Ab staining of T cells for the activation markers CD44 and CD69 revealed that 97% of CD8+ T cells in the CNS were CD44posCD69pos. A similar frequency of reactivity was also observed when CD8+ T lymphocytes early in infection were stained with Abs against CD49d and CD62L (CD49dposCD62Lneg, 84%). Several studies have indicated that activation is not an absolute requisite for T cell infiltration into the CNS (69, 70). In our model, the preferential recruitment of activated CD8+ T lymphocytes into the CNS of MCMV-infected animals suggested that peripheral T lymphocyte priming was an essential step for efficient CNS infiltration by effector T lymphocytes, although we cannot exclude the possibility of T lymphocyte priming in the CNS. Recent evidence from Toxoplasma gondii and Theilers Murine Encephalomyelitis Virus-infected mice suggested that T lymphocyte infiltrate priming by parenchymal dendritic cells occurs in the CNS (71, 72). If T cell priming occurred in MCMV-infected brain, then a constant turnover of T lymphocytes with a spectrum of naive to activated phenotypes would likely be present. Thus, a higher fraction of T cells in the CNS should display a naive, CD44negCD69neg phenotype, a phenomenon that was not observed. Therefore, the priming of CNS T cells during MCMV infection likely occurred in regional lymphoid tissues (73). In our model of MCMV encephalitis, multiorgan systemic infection was ongoing and immunogenic viral Ags were processed by tissue dendritic cells in most infected organs, including the CNS, as illustrated by the presence of IE1168-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes in both brain and liver of infected mice. This brings to question whether CNS T cell priming during systemic virus infections occurs in the cervical lymph node or whether circulating virus-specific T cells primed in various secondary lymphoid tissues are recruited to the CNS.
An intriguing feature observed in our model was the nominal recruitment of CD4+ T lymphocytes to the neonatal brain in MCMV-infected mice. This was in contrast to the infected liver where CD4+ T lymphocyte frequency increased as viral infection progressed. The peak CD4:CD8 ratio in the neonatal CNS was 0.11 (5%:42%) on PN day 18, whereas in the liver the ratio was 0.68 (22%:32%) on the same PN day. These data demonstrate the organ-specific recruitment of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes in these animals. This difference was also not dependent on the level of virus replication because similar amounts of virus per gram of organ were observed in both the liver and brain. Functional differences between the role of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes in the control of virus replication have been well described in mice with MCMV infections. CD4+ T lymphocytes are believed to play an essential role in the resolution of MCMV infection from salivary glands (74, 75). Immunodepletion of the CD4+ T lymphocyte subset resulted in prolonged MCMV replication in the salivary glands of infected mice, but there was no appreciable effect on MCMV clearance kinetics from the lungs and spleen in these animals (74). However, it is surprising that the ratio of CD4:CD8 T lymphocytes in the submaxillary glands of MCMV-infected adult mice was 0.22 (18%:81%), a ratio disproportionately skewed toward the CD8+ T lymphocyte subset (76, 77). Therefore, even though there was no direct correlation between the magnitude of the CD4+ T lymphocyte response and the infectious virus titer in MCMV-infected newborn mice brain, the possibility that MCMV-specific CD4+ T lymphocytes also play a role in the resolution of virus infection in the brains of infected animals either by directly mediating noncytolytic/cytolytic virus clearance of infected cells or indirectly via facilitating CD8+ T cell recruitment, proliferation, and maturation remains to be elucidated (78).
In summary, the findings presented here demonstrate a critical role of CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity in the control of MCMV infection of the developing CNS. CNS-infiltrating CD8+ T cells presented with a highly focused response. Adoptive transfer of these cells into immune-depleted hosts revealed in vivo functionality of CD8+ T cells and control of virus replication. Yet, it is important to realize that although our results define an important role of CD8+ T cells in control of CNS MCMV infection, they do not discount the contribution of other immune effector functions to MCMV clearance from the CNS, particularly in the very early phase of infection in the brain.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant HD 044721 (to W.J.B.). ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. William J. Britt, Department of Pediatrics, Childrens Hospital, Room 104 Harbor Building, 1600 7th Avenue South, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233. E-mail address: wbritt{at}peds.uab.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: HCMV, human CMV; MCMV, murine CMV; PN, postnatal; IE1, immediate-early 1. ![]()
Received for publication December 5, 2007. Accepted for publication May 21, 2008.
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D. Cekinovic, M. Golemac, E. P. Pugel, J. Tomac, L. Cicin-Sain, I. Slavuljica, R. Bradford, S. Misch, T. H. Winkler, M. Mach, et al. Passive Immunization Reduces Murine Cytomegalovirus-Induced Brain Pathology in Newborn Mice J. Virol., December 15, 2008; 82(24): 12172 - 12180. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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