Cross-reactivity between hepatitis C virus and Influenza A virus determinant-specific cytotoxic T cells

H Wedemeyer, E Mizukoshi, AR Davis… - Journal of …, 2001 - Am Soc Microbiol
H Wedemeyer, E Mizukoshi, AR Davis, JR Bennink, B Rehermann
Journal of virology, 2001Am Soc Microbiol
The cellular immune response contributes to viral clearance as well as to liver injury in acute
and chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. An immunodominant determinant frequently
recognized by liver-infiltrating and circulating CD8+ T cells of HCV-infected patients is the
HCVNS3-1073 peptide CVNGVCWTV. Using a sensitive in vitro technique with HCV
peptides and multiple cytokines, we were able to expand cytotoxic T cells specific for this
determinant not only from the blood of 11 of 20 HCV-infected patients (55%) but also from …
Abstract
The cellular immune response contributes to viral clearance as well as to liver injury in acute and chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. An immunodominant determinant frequently recognized by liver-infiltrating and circulating CD8+ T cells of HCV-infected patients is the HCVNS3-1073 peptide CVNGVCWTV. Using a sensitive in vitro technique with HCV peptides and multiple cytokines, we were able to expand cytotoxic T cells specific for this determinant not only from the blood of 11 of 20 HCV-infected patients (55%) but also from the blood of 9 of 15 HCV-negative blood donors (60%), while a second HCV NS3 determinant was recognized only by HCV-infected patients and not by seronegative controls. The T-cell response of these healthy blood donors was mediated by memory T cells, which cross-reacted with a novel T-cell determinant of the A/PR/8/34 influenza A virus (IV) that is endogenously processed from the neuraminidase (NA) protein. Both the HCV NS3 and the IV NA peptide displayed a high degree of sequence homology, bound to the HLA-A2 molecule with high affinity, and were recognized by cytotoxic T lymphocytes with similar affinity (10−8 M). Using the HLA-A2-transgenic mouse model, we then demonstrated directly that HCV-specific T cells could be induced in vivo by IV infection. Splenocytes harvested from IV-infected mice at the peak of the primary response (day 7 effector cells) or following complete recovery (day 21 memory cells) recognized the HCV NS3 peptide, lysed peptide-pulsed target cells, and produced gamma interferon. These results exemplify that host responses to an infectious agent are influenced by cross-reactive memory cells induced by past exposure to heterologous viruses, which could have important consequences for vaccine development.
American Society for Microbiology