Inhibition of TCR signaling by herpes simplex virus

DD Sloan, JY Han, TK Sandifer, M Stewart… - The Journal of …, 2006 - journals.aai.org
DD Sloan, JY Han, TK Sandifer, M Stewart, AJ Hinz, M Yoon, DC Johnson, PG Spear…
The Journal of Immunology, 2006journals.aai.org
T lymphocytes are an essential component of the immune response against HSV infection.
We previously reported that T cells became functionally impaired or inactivated after
contacting HSV-infected fibroblasts. In our current study, we investigate the mechanisms of
inactivation. We report that HSV-infected fibroblasts or HSV alone can inactivate T cells by
profoundly inhibiting TCR signal transduction. Inactivation requires HSV penetration into T
cells but not de novo transcription or translation. In HSV-inactivated T cells stimulated …
Abstract
T lymphocytes are an essential component of the immune response against HSV infection. We previously reported that T cells became functionally impaired or inactivated after contacting HSV-infected fibroblasts. In our current study, we investigate the mechanisms of inactivation. We report that HSV-infected fibroblasts or HSV alone can inactivate T cells by profoundly inhibiting TCR signal transduction. Inactivation requires HSV penetration into T cells but not de novo transcription or translation. In HSV-inactivated T cells stimulated through the TCR, phosphorylation of Zap70 occurs normally. However, TCR signaling is inhibited at linker for activation of T cells (LAT) and at steps distal to LAT in the TCR signal cascade including inhibition of calcium flux and inhibition of multiple MAPK. Inactivation of T cells by HSV leads to the reduced phosphorylation of LAT at tyrosine residues critical for TCR signal propagation. Treatment of T cells with tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors attenuates inactivation by HSV, and stimulus with a mitogen that bypasses LAT phosphorylation overcomes inactivation. Our findings elucidate a potentially novel method of viral immune evasion that could be exploited to better manage HSV infection, aid in vaccine design, or allow targeted manipulation of T cell function.
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