Broadly directed virus-specific CD4+ T cell responses are primed during acute hepatitis C infection, but rapidly disappear from human blood with viral persistence

J Schulze zur Wiesch, D Ciuffreda… - Journal of Experimental …, 2012 - rupress.org
J Schulze zur Wiesch, D Ciuffreda, L Lewis-Ximenez, V Kasprowicz, BE Nolan, H Streeck…
Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2012rupress.org
Vigorous proliferative CD4+ T cell responses are the hallmark of spontaneous clearance of
acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, whereas comparable responses are absent in
chronically evolving infection. Here, we comprehensively characterized the breadth,
specificity, and quality of the HCV-specific CD4+ T cell response in 31 patients with acute
HCV infection and varying clinical outcomes. We analyzed in vitro T cell expansion in the
presence of interleukin-2, and ex vivo staining with HCV peptide-loaded MHC class II …
Vigorous proliferative CD4+ T cell responses are the hallmark of spontaneous clearance of acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, whereas comparable responses are absent in chronically evolving infection. Here, we comprehensively characterized the breadth, specificity, and quality of the HCV-specific CD4+ T cell response in 31 patients with acute HCV infection and varying clinical outcomes. We analyzed in vitro T cell expansion in the presence of interleukin-2, and ex vivo staining with HCV peptide-loaded MHC class II tetramers. Surprisingly, broadly directed HCV-specific CD4+ T cell responses were universally detectable at early stages of infection, regardless of the clinical outcome. However, persistent viremia was associated with early proliferative defects of the HCV-specific CD4+ T cells, followed by rapid deletion of the HCV-specific response. Only early initiation of antiviral therapy was able to preserve CD4+ T cell responses in acute, chronically evolving infection. Our results challenge the paradigm that HCV persistence is the result of a failure to prime HCV-specific CD4+ T cells. Instead, broadly directed HCV-specific CD4+ T cell responses are usually generated, but rapid exhaustion and deletion of these cells occurs in the majority of patients. The data further suggest a short window of opportunity to prevent the loss of CD4+ T cell responses through antiviral therapy.
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