Tracking virus-specific CD4+ T cells during and after acute hepatitis C virus infection.

CD4+ T cell help is critical in maintaining antiviral immune responses and such help has been shown to be sustained in acute resolving hepatitis C. In contrast, in evolving chronic hepatitis C CD4+ T cell helper responses appear to be absent or short-lived, using functional assays.Here we used a nov...

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Main Authors: Michaela Lucas, Axel Ulsenheimer, Katja Pfafferot, Malte H J Heeg, Silvana Gaudieri, Norbert Grüner, Andri Rauch, J Tilman Gerlach, Maria-Christina Jung, Reinhart Zachoval, Gerd R Pape, Winfried Schraut, Teresa Santantonio, Hans Nitschko, Martin Obermeier, Rodney Phillips, Thomas J Scriba, Nasser Semmo, Cheryl Day, Jonathan N Weber, Sarah Fidler, Robert Thimme, Anita Haberstroh, Thomas F Baumert, Paul Klenerman, Helmut M Diepolder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1920556?pdf=render
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Summary:CD4+ T cell help is critical in maintaining antiviral immune responses and such help has been shown to be sustained in acute resolving hepatitis C. In contrast, in evolving chronic hepatitis C CD4+ T cell helper responses appear to be absent or short-lived, using functional assays.Here we used a novel HLA-DR1 tetramer containing a highly targeted CD4+ T cell epitope from the hepatitis C virus non-structural protein 4 to track number and phenotype of hepatitis C virus specific CD4+ T cells in a cohort of seven HLA-DR1 positive patients with acute hepatitis C in comparison to patients with chronic or resolved hepatitis C. We observed peptide-specific T cells in all seven patients with acute hepatitis C regardless of outcome at frequencies up to 0.65% of CD4+ T cells. Among patients who transiently controlled virus replication we observed loss of function, and/or physical deletion of tetramer+ CD4+ T cells before viral recrudescence. In some patients with chronic hepatitis C very low numbers of tetramer+ cells were detectable in peripheral blood, compared to robust responses detected in spontaneous resolvers. Importantly we did not observe escape mutations in this key CD4+ T cell epitope in patients with evolving chronic hepatitis C.During acute hepatitis C a CD4+ T cell response against this epitope is readily induced in most, if not all, HLA-DR1+ patients. This antiviral T cell population becomes functionally impaired or is deleted early in the course of disease in those where viremia persists.
ISSN:1932-6203