Infection of Adult Thymus with Murine Retrovirus Induces Virus-Specific Central Tolerance That Prevents Functional Memory CD8 T Cell Differentiation
During thymocyte development, cells that recognize self-antigens are specifically deleted by the process known as negative selection. However, some pathogens disseminate to the thymus, and can induce foreign antigen presentation within this organ, resulting in potentially harmful clonal deletion of pathogen-specific T-lymphocyte precursors. In chronic infections, pathogen-specific T cells in the periphery progressively lose their functionality due to continual stimulation with the persisting antigen, a phenomenon known as T cell exhaustion. However, pathogen-reactive naïve T cells freshly primed during the chronic phase of infection can nevertheless replenish the functional pool of memory T cells. Therefore, a lack of their generation in the face of peripheral exhaustion may ultimately cause the loss of functional memory T cells and the resultant lack of pathogen control. In this study, we demonstrate that Friend murine retrovirus can utilize the above immune evasion strategy, a combination of ongoing peripheral exhaustion and virus-induced central tolerance. Our data suggest that, along with the reinvigoration of exhausted T cells in the periphery, preservation of the thymic function in supplying pathogen-specific naïve T cells may be important when considering immunological control of chronic infection with thymotropic pathogens.
Published in the journal:
. PLoS Pathog 10(3): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003937
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003937
Summary
During thymocyte development, cells that recognize self-antigens are specifically deleted by the process known as negative selection. However, some pathogens disseminate to the thymus, and can induce foreign antigen presentation within this organ, resulting in potentially harmful clonal deletion of pathogen-specific T-lymphocyte precursors. In chronic infections, pathogen-specific T cells in the periphery progressively lose their functionality due to continual stimulation with the persisting antigen, a phenomenon known as T cell exhaustion. However, pathogen-reactive naïve T cells freshly primed during the chronic phase of infection can nevertheless replenish the functional pool of memory T cells. Therefore, a lack of their generation in the face of peripheral exhaustion may ultimately cause the loss of functional memory T cells and the resultant lack of pathogen control. In this study, we demonstrate that Friend murine retrovirus can utilize the above immune evasion strategy, a combination of ongoing peripheral exhaustion and virus-induced central tolerance. Our data suggest that, along with the reinvigoration of exhausted T cells in the periphery, preservation of the thymic function in supplying pathogen-specific naïve T cells may be important when considering immunological control of chronic infection with thymotropic pathogens.
Introduction
Antigen-specific CD8+ T cell populations are a major component that eliminate cells infected with intracellular pathogens. After infections that are cleared acutely, antigen-specific CD8+ T cells can differentiate into functionally competent memory CD8+ T cells, and can persist for a long time in the apparent absence of relevant antigens [1]. In contrast, in the case of chronic infections where the antigens are presented persistently, CD8+ T cells primed during the early phase of infection succumb to progressive functional defects, such as impaired ability to proliferate, kill infected cells, and/or produce effector cytokines in response to the antigen-specific stimulation [2]. In most cases, this loss of effector functions is due to signaling through inhibitory molecules such as programmed cell death 1 (PD-1), lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG-3), CD244, CD160, and T cell Ig domain and mucin domain 3 (Tim-3), and is called exhaustion [2]. The severity of this dysfunction, which is in correlation with the numbers and extent of inhibitory molecules expressed on exhausted CD8+ T cells, is critically linked with the levels of repetitive exposure to the relevant antigen [3]. In addition to their negative effects on the functionality of antigen-experienced CD8+ T cells, persisting antigens also induce stable proliferation of already-exhausted memory CD8+ T cells [4]. The resultantly sustained numbers of functionally impaired memory CD8+ T cells potentially inhibit optimal priming of otherwise functional fresh memory CD8+ T cells via physiological competition for the niche. Thus, chronic infection is a vicious circle of ongoing CD8+ T cell dysfunction and ineffective antigen clearance. Despite such detrimental effects, however, recent studies shed light on a beneficial role of persistent antigens on the functionalities of memory CD8+ T cells. Naïve CD8+ T cells are continuously provided from the thymus even during the chronic phase of infection, and this continual thymic output can result in the priming of new antigen-specific CD8+ T cells [5]. Unlike exhausted CD8+ T cells that were primed in the early phase of infection, CD8+ T cells primed during the chronic phase of infection in low-antigen and less intensive inflammatory settings give rise to functional memory CD8+ T cells capable of mounting authentic recall responses [6]. Similar memory-dominated differentiation of CD8+ T cells can also be found when CD8+ T cells are primed after the peak of an acute infection, by the time that the majority of antigens have been cleared out [7]. Thus, persistent antigens play an important role in generating functional memory CD8+ T cells in the presence of continual thymic output.
Friend virus (FV) is a murine retrovirus complex comprising two gammaretroviruses: replication-competent Friend murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) and replication-defective spleen focus-forming virus (SFFV) [8]. Although FV particles can bind onto the surfaces of a wide variety of cells via cationic amino acid transporter as an entry receptor [9], [10], viral replication occurs preferentially in actively dividing hematopoietic cells, especially in erythroid progenitor cells in the bone marrow (BM) and spleen [8]. In the susceptible strains of mice [e.g. (C57BL/6×A/WySnJ)F1 (B6AF1) mice], SFFV gp55 envelope glycoprotein stimulates erythropoietin receptor in conjunction with its binding to the short form of hematopoietic cell-specific receptor tyrosine kinase Stk/Ron, resulting in massive expansion of virus-infected erythroblasts [11], [12]. As a result, FV-infected mice develop severe splenomegaly associated with polycythemia and high-level viremia [8]. This acute pathogenesis ultimately causes leukemia development in some cases, but most B6AF1 mice recover from the above initial splenomegaly and survive. Following recovery, however, FV establishes a lifelong chronic infection and mice are never able to completely eradicate this virus [13]. Although antigen levels are low during the chronic phase of infection, it is sufficient to prime antigen-specific CD8+ T cells, as adoptively transferred FV-specific CD8+ T cells can be activated and acquire effector functions in chronically infected animals [14]. However, the precise effect of persistent antigens on the functionalities of FV-specific memory CD8+ T cells remains unclear.
It has been proposed that FV-specific CD8+ T cells progressively lose their effector functions during the chronic phase of infection due to suppression by virus-induced regulatory T cells (Tregs) [14]–[20]. In B6AF1 mice, however, we found that severe dysfunction of FV-specific CD8+ T cells appeared even during the acute phase of infection in the absence of an apparent increase in Treg functions, and this was critically related with the FV-induced acute pathogenesis [21]. At the peak of infection, numbers of virus-infected erythroblasts in the spleen reached more than 108, comprising approximately 75% of total splenocytes. These virus-infected erythroblasts intensively expressed programmed death ligand 1 (PD-L1) and MHC class I, thereby creating a highly tolerogenic environment. Consequently, FV-specific effector CD8+ T cells suffered rapid exhaustion, and most of these cells were incapable of responding to restimulation with FV-encoded antigens [21]. Since effector CD8+ T cells generated in the absence of the splenomegaly in mice inoculated with F-MuLV alone showed less exhausted phenotypes as compared to those generated in the presence of splenomegaly, SFFV-induced pathogenesis was shown to be mainly responsible for the severe and rapid exhaustion of antigen-specific effector CD8+ T cells [21]. In the current study, we further extended our previous study, and found that functional memory CD8+ T cells were rarely detected in FV-infected mice even during the chronic phase of infection. This severe dysfunction was apparently exclusive to FV-specific CD8+ T cells but not found in FV-unrelated CD8+ T cells. As a basis for this antigen-specific memory T cell dysfunction, FV is shown to disseminate to the thymus and induce virus-specific central tolerance, thereby preventing the generation of virus-specific naïve CD8+ T cells. Thus, the severe dysfunction of FV-specific memory CD8+ T cells is likely due to a combination of ongoing peripheral exhaustion and the deletion of virus-reactive thymocytes.
Results
FV disseminates to and persists in the thymus following infection
Infection of B6AF1 mice with FV results in the expansion of virus-infected erythroblasts that causes severe exhaustion of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells even during the acute phase of infection [21]. During the chronic phase of FV infection where the progressive expansion of virus-infected erythroblasts has resolved, FV-specific naïve CD8+ T cells must be continuously provided from the thymus. If this is the case, newly recruited FV-specific naïve CD8+ T cells should be primed with persistent FV antigens in the absence of expanded virus-infected erythroblasts. These newly primed CD8+ T cells may then participate in the FV-specific CD8+ T cell responses with better functionalities than the above exhausted cells [5]. However, most of the virus-specific memory CD8+ T cells in the BM and spleen still retained highly exhausted phenotypes even more than 6 weeks after infection, as determined by the expression of multiple inhibitory receptors, PD-1, LAG-3, and Tim-3 on their surfaces (Figure S1A, B). Levels of expression of these inhibitory receptors were much higher on virus-specific CD8+ T cells in the BM than on those in the spleen, indicating that during the chronic phase of infection, memory CD8+ T cells received more abundant antigenic stimulation in the former tissue (Figure S1B). As most virus-specific CD8+ T cells succumb to irreversible exhaustion even during the early phase of infection [21], the above phenotypically exhausted memory CD8+ T cells in chronically infected mice were no longer reinvigorated by the administration of PD-1-blocking antibody (data not shown). In support of this, almost no FV antigen-reactive IFN-γ production from CD8+ T cells was detected when FV-infected mice were later challenged with FBL3 tumor cells, a potent inducer of FV-specific CD8+ T cell responses, and the cells were restimulated with the MHC class I-restricted viral antigenic peptide (Figure S1C, D). These virus-infected mice also failed to control FBL3 tumor progression, similar to those that received syngenic tumor cells, EL-4, while uninfected mice rapidly rejected the tumor (Figure S1E, F). Based on these observations, we started to ask if FV infection influences the continuous recruitment of virus-specific naïve CD8+ T cells from the thymus.
It has been reported that the BM and spleen are the major organs where massive replication of FV takes place [8]. Large numbers of virus-producing cells were already found in the BM at as early as 1 week post infection, and their numbers in the spleen reached a peak by 2 weeks post infection (Figure 1A). Despite a gradual decline after the peak of infection, significant numbers of virus-producing cells could still be detected until at least 10 weeks post infection, indicating that FV established persistent infection in these organs (Figure 1A). Surprisingly, significant numbers of virus-producing cells were also detected in the thymus at 2 weeks post infection, followed by the establishment of persistent infection in this organ (Figure 1A). At 2 weeks post FV infection, both F-MuLV and SFFV mRNA were detected from the thymus, but the levels of SFFV mRNA expression were much lower than those of F-MuLV mRNA in this organ (Figure 1B). Using the monoclonal antibody specific for F-MuLV envelope glycoprotein gp70 we found that it is mainly double positive (DP) and double negative (DN) thymocytes that harbor F-MuLV in the thymus, as up to 50% of cells in these populations were expressing gp70 on their surfaces at the peak of infection (Figure 2A and Figure 3A). Surface expression of F-MuLV gag p15 antigen was also detected on gp70-expressing DN and DP thymocytes (Figure 3B), indicating the presence of glycosylated gag protein (gPr75gag). Further, when thymocytes were fixed and permeabilized, F-MuLV capsid p30 antigen was also detected in gp70+ DN and DP thymocytes (data not shown). These results indicate that F-MuLV gene products were actively synthesized in DN and DP thymocytes. Immunohistochemical analyses also revealed viral gag antigen expression throughout the cortex where the DN and DP thymocytes were distributed (Figure 3C). Interestingly, the spread of the virus into the thymus appeared to be delayed a week as compared to that in the BM and spleen (Figure 1), suggesting that the dissemination of the virus to the thymus occurred following massive viral replication in the BM and spleen. In support of this, only marginal increases in proportions of gp70+ cells in the thymus were observed when Fv2r C57BL/6 (B6) mice lacking the expression of the short form of STK (sf-Stk) were infected with FV or B6AF1 mice were inoculated with F-MuLV alone (Figure S2). Thus SFFV-induced proliferation of FV-infected erythroid cells is required for effective dissemination of FV into the thymus.
Notably, CD44hi DN thymocytes virtually lacked the expression of gp70, indicating that T cell progenitors migrated from the BM were not an initial source of virus dissemination to the thymus (Figure 2A). Since FV proviruses are known to be preferentially integrated into proliferating cells, and a large proportion of CD44− DN thymocytes were gp70+, it is likely that FV initially infects DN thymocytes within this organ, and then replicates vigorously in DN thymocytes that proliferate and differentiate into DP thymocytes. The highest number of virus-producing cells in the DN population among thymocytes also supports this idea (Figure 3D). The expression of FV antigens was also found on the surfaces of all thymic DC populations as well as on medullary (mTECs) and cortical thymic epithelial cells (cTECs) (Figure 2B, C, Figure 3A, C, and Figure S3). Unlike the virus-infected thymocytes, however, the production of infectious virus particles was not detected from the thymic DC and TEC populations, at least by infectious center assays (Figure 3D). These results suggest that although cell-bound viral antigens are detectable in most cell types in the thymus, productive viral replication occurs preferentially in the thymocytes.
Infection of the thymus with FV leads to clonal deletion of FV-specific thymocytes
Given the global nature of FV infection in the thymus, we anticipated that the general function of the thymus in FV-infected mice might be affected. Unlike the spleen, where the physiological architecture was significantly disrupted by the massive expansion of erythroblasts, the vigorous viral replication had no impact on the size of the thymus (data not shown), and caused no apparent morphologic abnormality even at the peak of infection (Figure 4A). The frequencies and absolute numbers of each thymocyte population in FV-infected mice were also not different from those in age-matched uninfected mice (Figure 4B, C). These results so far revealed that the basic function of the thymus appeared to be retained in FV-infected mice.
However, since viral antigen expression was found in the thymic DCs and TECs (Figure 2 and 3), we speculated that processed viral antigens could be presented in the context of MHC class I and class II molecules on the surfaces of these cells, which might eliminate thymocytes bearing viral antigen-reactive T-cell receptors (TCRs) via negative selection. To test this, we employed a thymus transplantation approach in which thymic lobes from either FV-infected (4–8 weeks post infection) or age-matched uninfected mice were transplanted into syngenic recipients that have been thymectomized and treated with T-cell-depleting antibodies prior to the transplantation (Figure 5A). Transplantation of thymic lobes from FV-infected or uninfected mice was equally able to reconstitute peripheral T cells as we observed similar frequencies of CD8+ T cells in the blood at 6–8 weeks post transplantation (Figure 5B). Note that we have checked spleen weights and F-MuLV gp70 expression on B cells and Ter119+ erythroblasts in the recipient mice that received the thymus from FV-infected donors, and found no evidence of splenomegaly or significant increase in gp70+ cells (Figure S4). These results clearly indicate minimal, if any, transmission of FV via the transplantation of thymic lobes from FV-infected donors. In both recipient groups, comparable frequencies and numbers of influenza nucleoprotein (NP)-specific CD8+ T cells were detected in the spleens following infection with influenza virus ×31 (Figure 5C, D), suggesting that CD8+ T cells that arose from the FV-infected thymic transplant were bona fide mature T lymphocytes with the intact capability to respond to an FV-unrelated antigen. Importantly, however, following challenge with FV antigen-bearing FBL3 tumor cells, minimal evidence of FV-specific tetramer binding on CD8+ T cells was observed in mice transplanted with FV-infected thymuses, while control mice transplanted with uninfected thymuses showed significantly higher levels of FV-specific CD8+ T cell expansion at the peak of response (Figure 5C, D). This was indicative of an incapability of FV-infected thymus to generate FV-specific naïve CD8+ T cells. Overall, the above data clearly demonstrated that thymic infection with FV resulted in the depletion of thymocytes expressing TCRs specific for FV antigens.
Thymic DCs and TECs are the direct deleters of FV-specific thymocytes
Given that the dissemination of FV to the thymus led to the apparent negative selection of viral antigen-reactive thymocytes, we next wished to determine which cell populations in the FV-infected thymus were responsible for this negative selection. To do this, we performed the fetal thymus organ culture (FTOC) [22]. To utilize TCR-transgenic T cells, we first generated a recombinant F-MuLV, F-MuLV-OVA, expressing the Kb-restricted OVA-derived peptide OVA257–264, for which the OT-1 CD8+ T cells are reactive, and the activation of OT-1 CD8+ T cells upon stimulation with F-MuLV-OVA-infected cells was confirmed (Figure S5). As the SFFV-induced massive proliferation of erythroid cells was required for effective dissemination of F-MuLV into the thymus (Figure S2), mice were either inoculated with FV alone (a mixture of approximately equal infectious titers of F-MuLV and SFFV) or FV plus F-MuLV-OVA (abbreviated as FV-OVA). To ensure that F-MuLV-OVA could infect SFFV-infected erythroid cells by overcoming the possible receptor interference with wild-type F-MuLV, a twice larger infectious titer of F-MuLV-OVA was given relative to the titer of F-MuLV in the FV complex used. A mixture of thymocyte-depleted thymic stromal cells from uninfected fetus (day 15 of gestation) and FACS-sorted OT-1 DP thymocytes were cultured in the presence of a third population (each single population purified from the thymus of either FV- or FV-OVA-infected mice) as a candidate deleter cell population (Figure 6A). In the absence of the third population, the development of OT-1 CD8 single positive (SP) cells was observed at day 5, which was apparently reduced when OVA-expressing E.G7 cells were added in the culture (Figure S6A). The addition of control EL-4 cells did not affect the generation of CD8 SP cells, revealing the reliability of this approach to test the ability of the third population to induce antigen-specific negative selection. Because the numbers of OT-1 CD8 SP cells recovered from the FTOC varied significantly in each experiment, perhaps due to the technical difficulty in simultaneously preparing three different groups of cells (stromal cells, OT-1 DP thymocytes, and third populations purified from the thymus of virus-infected mice; see Figure 6A), we evaluated the influences of third populations on the development of OT-1 CD8 SP cells by calculating the relative reduction of the frequency of OT-1 CD8 SP cells in an experimental culture compared to those in the control culture (without adding the third population) in each set of experiments (Figure S6B). As shown in Figure 6B, the addition of thymocyte populations from FV-OVA-infected mice had no influence on the development of OT-1 CD8 SP cells, indicating that despite the high level of FV infection and extensive antigen expression, FV-infected thymocytes did not actively induce the negative selection of viral antigen-specific thymocytes. In contrast, we observed a significant reduction in the frequencies of OT-1 CD8 SP cells when the cultures contained either thymic DC populations (except pDC) or TEC populations from FV-OVA-infected mice (Figure 6B and Figure S6B). Although some reductions in the frequency of OT-1 CD8 SP cells were also observed when DCs and TECs from FV-infected mice were added in the culture, the extent of CD8 SP cell reduction was significantly higher when thymic DCs or mTEC from FV-OVA-infected mice were added (Figure 6B and Figure S6B). The data thus far suggest that presentation of viral antigens on the thymic DCs and TECs seems to play a key role in inducing clonal deletion of viral antigen-reactive thymocytes.
FV-specific CD8+ T cells, if recruited during the chronic phase of infection, can differentiate into functional memory CD8+ T cells
In the case of other models of chronic infection in which the pathogens do not disseminate to, or disappear from, the thymus [e.g. polyoma virus infection or more than 30 days after lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) clone 13 infection], newly recruited virus-specific CD8+ T cells can be primed and differentiate into functional memory CD8+ T cells [5], [6]. Therefore, we hypothesized that if FV-specific CD8+ T cells were generated in animals chronically infected with FV, such recent thymic emigrants (RTEs) may be able to undergo a process of post-thymic maturation, and then be primed and differentiate into antiviral CD8+ T cells with a superior functional capacity as compared to the severely exhausted memory CD8+ T cells in the periphery. To test this possibility, we investigated if the immune environments in chronically infected animals influence the process of post-thymic maturation in the periphery. To this end, we used Rag1-GFP knock-in mice as a tool to distinguish RTEs based on the expression of GFP within peripheral T cells, and first analyzed total, mostly FV-nonreactive, CD8+ T cells since FV-infected mice lack the generation of FV-specific RTEs as shown above. Total numbers of GFP+CD8+ T cells in the spleens of FV-infected and age-matched uninfected mice were comparable at 6 weeks post infection (Figure S7A, B), confirming the unaffected T-cell generating function of the FV-infected thymus (Figure 4). Importantly, in the FV-infected mice, while a large proportion of GFP−CD8+ T cells showed the highly activated phenotype (CD44hiCD69+PD-1hi), GFP+CD8+ RTEs at 6 weeks post infection showed minimal signs of abnormal activation as they mostly remained CD44loCD69−PD-1lo (Figure S7C). Since GFP expression is reduced concurrently with Rag expression ceasing 2–3 weeks after TCR rearrangements (1–2 weeks after exiting from the thymus) [23], GFP+CD8+ T cells detected at 6 weeks post infection should have been generated after FV infection, and thus the above results on unactivated phenotypes indicate that the RTEs did not receive bystander inflammatory signals even in the chronically infected environment. A transient increase in the proportion of activated (CD44hiCD69+PD-1hi) CD8+ RTEs at the peak of infection (2 weeks post FV infection) also supports this idea (Figure S7C). At 6 weeks post infection, gradual loss (CD24) and gain (CD127 and Qa2) of surface antigen expression by CD8+ RTEs revealed a prototypic status of post-thymic maturation in FV-infected mice (Figure S6D) [23]. Furthermore, although CD8+ RTEs typically have only a weak capacity to produce cytokines [24], GFP+CD8+ T cells in FV-infected mice were capable of producing IFN-γ and IL-2 upon stimulation with anti-CD3 antibody at levels comparable with those in the uninfected mice (Figure S7E, F). These results indicate that chronic infection with FV has little, if any, impact on the post-thymic maturation of RTEs in general.
Nevertheless, it is possible that chronic infection with FV may create an immune suppressive environment that impairs the peripheral priming of CD8+ T cells. To examine this possibility we next asked whether naïve (post-thymically matured) CD8+ T cells could be adequately primed in animals chronically infected with FV. To do this, mice were infected with FV, and 6–8 weeks later were further infected with an FV-unrelated pathogen, influenza ×31 (Figure 7A). Eleven days post ×31 infection, FV-infected mice nevertheless developed robust anti-influenza CD8+ T cell responses detectable with MHC tetramer staining and antigen-specific IFN-γ production in association with the surface expression of CD107a (Figure 7). Importantly, levels of the influenza NP-specific CD8+ T cell responses in the FV-infected mice were as high as those in the uninfected mice, indicating that chronic FV infection had minimal impact on the induction of influenza-specific CD8+ T cell responses (Figure 7). Differentiation of functionally competent memory CD8+ T cells was also observed in FV-infected mice at a later stage of influenza virus infection (data not shown). Similar to the model shown in Figure S1, however, FV-specific CD8+ T cells generated in the same FV-infected animals were severely exhausted at any time-point examined in this experimental setting (data not shown). These results indicate that even in the situation where the functions of FV-specific CD8+ T cells were severely compromised (Figure S1), animals chronically infected with FV had no, if any, defects in mounting FV-unrelated CD8+ T cell responses.
Based on the above observations that FV-unrelated CD8+ T cells can be activated in a chronically FV-infected environment, we next investigated whether FV-specific naïve CD8+ T cells recruited from FV-uninfected exogenous sources can be primed and differentiate into functional memory CD8+ T cells in the recipients during the chronic phase of infection. To do this, naïve (CD44lo) OT-1 cells were transferred into mice that had been infected chronically with either FV or FV-OVA (Figure 8A). As shown in Figure 8B, a small but significant proportion of transferred OT-1 cells were found to be primed in the presence of persistent OVA antigen expressed from FV-OVA at 4 weeks post transfer. As expected, the expression of PD-1 on the newly primed OT-1 cells was significantly lower than that on highly exhausted endogenous OVA-specific CD8+ T cells (Figure 8C, D), indicating that newly primed virus-specific CD8+ T cells were not exhausted. Interestingly, transferred OT-1 cells were rarely recruited to the BM (Figure 8C), a hot spot of persistent antigen presentation (Figure S1B). This might explain why newly primed OT-1 cells were not instantly exhausted. Slightly lower levels in the expression of the recent activation marker CD69 on OT-1 cells as compared to that on endogenous OVA-specific CD8+ T cells is probably due to the priming of naïve OT-1 cells needing professional APCs while endogenous, antigen-experienced OVA-specific CD8+ T cells can be reactivated by most virus-infected cells (Figure 8C, D). Intracellular cytokine staining of antigen-experienced (CD44hi) OT-1 cells revealed a high-level production of IFN-γ in response to OVA257–264 peptide stimulation, which was observed exclusively in newly primed OT-1 cells transferred in the chronic phase of infection, but not in OT-1 cells transferred prior to FV-OVA infection (thus, those primed in the early phase of infection) (Figure 8A, E, F). Moreover, newly primed OT-1 cells still retained the ability to produce IL-2, a function that disappeared primarily in the exhausted CD8+ T cells (Figure 8E, F) [25]. OT-1 cell transfer into FV-OVA-infected mice resulted in a slight reduction in spleen weights and a significant decrease in the numbers of infectious centers (Figure 8G), indicating that late-primed OT-1 cells can control chronic infection at least to some extent. Although we cannot predict from the above observation that newly recruited FV-specific CD8+ RTEs would control chronic infection, as the number of transferred OT-1 cells (1×107) might be non-physiological, the above results clearly demonstrate that, despite the replication-competent component of the FV-OVA in the present experiment being a mixture of F-MuLV-OVA and wild-type F-MuLV, a significant proportion of infected erythroid cells expressed the OVA epitope. These results thus provide conclusive evidence that if FV-specific naïve CD8+ T cells are continuously recruited from the thymus even during the chronic phase of FV infection, cells newly primed with the persistent antigen can at least differentiate into the functional memory CD8+ T cells and may contribute to FV control. Overall, the above data indicate that FV-induced central tolerance inhibits the generation of virus-specific naïve CD8+ T cells that can otherwise be primed with FV antigens even in the chronic phase of infection, and the resultant lack of FV-reactive RTEs contributes to the observed lack of functional memory CD8+ T cells along with the exhaustion of antigen-experienced CD8+ T cells.
Discussion
Recognition of self-antigens in the thymus is essential for the deletion of self-reactive thymocytes. In addition, silencing selection-escaped CD8+ T cells via abundant antigens and PD-1-mediated costimulation in the periphery is one of the mechanisms of peripheral tolerance, in addition to the suppression of self-reactive effector T cells by Tregs [26]. The data presented in our current and previous studies have demonstrated cunning strategies of murine retrovirus to evade anti-viral CD8+ T cell immunity by modulating both central and peripheral tolerance. During the acute phase of infection, massively expanded virus-infected PD-L1hi erythroblasts disrupt the function of virus-specific effector CD8+ T cells in the periphery [21]. Then, the virus disseminates to the thymus and induces viral antigen presentation by DCs and TECs just as if self-antigens are present. In fact, endogenous retroviral antigens potentially cross-reactive to the exogenous retroviruses are known to be present in the thymus and shape T cell responses to the exogenous retroviruses by inducing the negative selection of low-avidity virus-reactive T cells [27]. On the other hand, the presentation of exogenously infecting viral antigens in the thymus inhibits subsequent production of virus-specific naïve CD8+ T cells as a source of functional memory CD8+ T cells in chronically infected animals as we have shown here for FV infection. Consequently, almost all virus-specific CD8+ T cells in FV-infected animals lack their effector functions. Although viral replication is controlled at low levels by the production of virus-neutralizing antibodies [8], mice chronically infected with FV are highly susceptible to challenge with FV-induced tumor cells against which CD8+ T cell response is required for effective elimination.
Induction of pathogen-specific central tolerance through thymic dissemination is not a unique feature of FV infection. It has been reported that neonatal infection with Gross murine leukemia virus (G-MuLV) or Moloney murine leukemia virus (Mo-MuLV) results in intrathymic viral replication that induces life-long immune nonresponsiveness to viral antigens [28], [29]. It should be noted, however, that when inoculated into adult mice, Mo-MuLV is rapidly eliminated and does not cause leukemia [30]. Interestingly, experiments on intrathymic (i.t.) inoculation revealed that G-MuLV infects predominantly thymic epithelial cells, while Mo-MuLV, which does not induce tolerance following i.t. inoculation in adult mice, favors mature T cells as targets of infection in the thymus [28], [31], [32]. In the case of adult infection, as mentioned above, LCMV clone 13 is known to disseminate to the thymus and induce virus-specific central tolerance [33]–[35]. Recently, some species of Mycobacteria have also been reported to induce bacteria-specific T cell tolerance via thymic dissemination [36], [37]. Since some extent of functional pathogen-specific CD8+ T cells remain in these chronically infected animals, loss of pathogen-specific RTEs does not make a significant impact on ongoing infections [38]. Contrarily, FV infection leads to almost complete loss of functional virus-specific CD8+ T cells in the periphery [21]. Furthermore, because functional antigen-specific CD8+ T cells in the periphery re-enter the thymus and can delete infected APCs to abrogate central tolerance [33], [34], [39], early and overall exhaustion of functional FV-specific CD8+ T cells in the periphery may extend viral persistency in the thymus due to ineffective viral clearance in this organ.
A question that remains is how FV initially disseminates to the thymus. The finding that CD44hi DN thymocytes lack the expression of viral proteins indicates that BM-originated common lymphoid progenitor cells are unlikely to be an active transporter of the virus to the thymus. In the steady state, it has been demonstrated that conventional DCs, as well as plasmacytoid DCs in the blood, transport peripheral self-antigens to the thymus and initiate central tolerance [40], [41]. In pathological conditions, however, the activation/maturation process strongly inhibits the migration of peripheral DC populations to the thymus by modulating their chemokine receptor expression [40], [41], thus preventing the unfavorable induction of acquired tolerance to the invading pathogens. However, it has become evident that in some cases, such as infections with Mycobacteria and highly pathogenic influenza virus, pathogen-infected DCs of an extrathymic origin can transport the infectious microorganisms to the thymus, resulting in thymic dissemination and subsequent thymic dysfunctions [36], [42]. Although we do not exclude the possibility that this could be the case in FV infection, as gp70 expression was observed on extrathymic DCs in the thymus, we could not detect the production of infectious virions from any thymic DC population even at the peak of infection. Alternatively, because prior exposure to antigen enhances the migration of mature T cells to the thymus, activated T cells that are infected with the virus in the periphery, if there are any, might be another potential source in transporting the virus into the thymus. However, faint expression of gp70 on CD44hi, CD4 SP and CD8 SP populations in FV-infected thymus makes this unlikely. Since F-MuLV can infect and replicate in endothelial cells at high levels, and the virus particles can be found in a subendothelial location of blood vessels [43], [44], it is reasonable to postulate that FV disseminates to the thymus through the replication in the endothelial cells and subsequent production of viral particles to the parenchymal side, rather than via the migration of virus-infected hematopoietic cells into the organ.
Another issue to be considered is whether thymic infection with FV results in the generation of Tregs. It has become clear that thymocytes that display TCRs with higher affinity (but much lower than that induces negative selection) for thymic MHC/self-peptide ligands can develop into Tregs [45], [46]. Thus, not only the induction of negative selection, but the generation of naturally occurring Tregs (nTregs) harboring TCRs reactive with non-self antigen could also be induced by thymic infection with pathogens [47]. As an increase in the number of Tregs in lymphoid organs has long been recognized in FV-infected animals [16]–[18], [48], dissemination of the virus into the thymus might be one of the factors that cause the increase of Tregs. In fact, the observed expansion of Tregs peaked around 2 weeks post FV infection [16], approximately the same time-point that viral antigen expression in the thymus was peaking. In the recent study, moreover, adoptive transfer of FoxP3− CD4+ T cells and tracking neuropilin-1 expression as a marker of nTregs revealed that Tregs that expanded after FV infection originated from thymus-derived nTregs but not from FoxP3− conventional CD4+ T cells in the periphery [48]. Importantly, however, it was suggested that Tregs that expanded after FV infection lack the expression of TCRs specific for FV antigen [48], [49]. Therefore, viral antigen expression in the thymus may preferentially contribute to the deletion of FV-reactive conventional T cells rather than the induction of nTregs carrying FV-reactive TCRs.
In summary, the loss of antigen-specific RTE production induced by thymic infection is a unique and powerful evasion strategy from antiviral CD8+ T cell responses, especially when the functions of virus-specific CD8+ T cells in the periphery are concomitantly severely compromised during the chronic phase of infection. Similar synergistic negative consequences could be induced in chronic infection with other thymotropic viruses such as HIV, although mechanisms of thymic failure may differ. In fact, HIV is known to cause thymotoxic infection that prevents adequate T cell generation [50], while FV infection does not affect thymocyte differentiation in general. There is no doubt that reinvigoration of exhausted virus-specific CD8+ T cells in the periphery is a primary therapeutic target as we have shown in the case of acute FV infection [21]. However, as successful recovery from AIDS under anti-retroviral therapy is largely owing to the thymus-driven immune reconstitution, careful monitoring of the thymic function would be required in cases of thymotropic virus infection.
Materials and Methods
Ethics statements
The studies utilizing laboratory animals were carried out in strict accordance with the Act on Welfare and Management of Animals of the Government of Japan and the Regulations for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals of Kinki University. The protocol for the present study was approved by the Institutional Animal Experimentation Committee of Kinki University Faculty of Medicine (Permit Number: KAME-20-066). All surgery was performed under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia, and all efforts were made to minimize suffering.
Viruses, mice, cells and infection/injection
An original stock of B-tropic FV complex without contamination of lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus was kindly provided by Kim Hasenkrug (NIH, NIAID, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, Hamilton, MT). FV was expanded, stored, and titered as previously described [51]. An infectious molecular clone of F-MuLV, FB29, was prepared from culture supernatant of chronically infected Mus dunni cells as previously described [51]. A plasmid harboring the permutated FB29 cDNA was kindly provided by Marc Sitbon (Institut de Génétique Moléculaire de Montpellier, Montpellier, France). To insert the OVA epitope (SIINFEKL) into the C-terminus of the F-MuLV envelope protein in-frame, a pair of PCR primers that hybridize with the 3′ region of the F-MuLV genome and harbor the OVA sequence were used along with the above plasmid as the template (Figure S4B). Infectious F-MuLV-OVA was produced by transfecting Mus dunni cells with the mutant plasmid. Influenza virus A/HK-×31 was provided by David L. Woodland (Keystone Symposia, Silverthorne, CO). FBL3 is an F-MuLV-induced leukemia of B6 origin that expresses FV-related antigens [21]. EL-4 (a T cell lymphoma line derived from B6 mice) and E.G7 (EL-4 cells expressing OVA protein) were purchased from ATCC (Manassas, VA). C57BL/6NCrSlc (B6) mice were purchased from Japan SLC, Inc. (Shizuoka, Japan). A/WySnJ, B6.PL-Thy1a/CyJ (Thy1.1; CD90.1+) and B6.SJL-PtprcaPepcb/BoyJ (Pep/Boy; CD45.1+) mice were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). OT-1 TCR transgenic mice with the B6 background (OT-1 mice) were kindly provided by Miyuki Azuma (Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan) with the permission of William R. Heath (University of Melbourne, Victoria Australia) [52]. OT-1 and Thy1.1 mice were crossed and F2 progeny mice were selected for OT-1 TCR and Thy1.1 homozygosity by using monoclonal antibody (mAb) specific for mouse TCR Vα2, CD90.1 and CD90.2. OT-1-Thy1.1 mice thus obtained were >98% Vα2+ among CD8+ T cells, CD90.1+ and CD90.2−. (OT-1-Thy1.1× A/WySnJ)F1 mice were confirmed to be OT-1 TCR+ and Thy1.1+ and used in this study, and T cells separated from the above F1 mice are termed OT-1 T cells in the text. Rag1-GFP knock-in mice with the B6 background have been described [53]. Animals were housed and bred in the Experimental Animal Facilities at Kinki University Faculty of Medicine under specific pathogen-free conditions. Due to a mutation in the intron of the Stk gene, B6 mice lack the expression of sf-Stk, and are resistant to SFFV-induced expansion of virus-infected erythroblasts and resultant splenomegaly [11], [12]. As this erythroid cell expansion induced during the early phase of infection has been shown to be the major cause of severe exhaustion of virus-specific CD8+ T cells [21], we used B6AF1 mice that express sf-Stk in this study. Both male and female B6AF1 mice, 6 to 10 weeks old, were infected intravenously (i.v.) either with 1,000 spleen focus-forming units (SFFU) of FV or with 2,000 focus-forming units of F-MuLV-OVA plus 1,000 SFFU of FV (termed FV-OVA). For tumor rejection experiments, mice were injected subcutaneously (s.c.) with 5×106 of FBL3 or EL-4 cells. Some experimental mice were challenged intranasally (i.n.) with 300 egg infective dose 50 (EID50) of ×31.
Tissue harvest and flow cytometry
Mice were sacrificed at the indicated time points and single-cell suspensions from each tissue were obtained by straining through nylon mesh, depleted of erythrocytes in buffered ammonium chloride, and panned on goat anti-mouse IgG (H+L) (KPL, Gaithersburg, MD) for tetramer staining [21]. Live-cell counts were determined by trypan blue exclusion. Isolated cells were incubated with anti-CD16/32 (BD Biosciences, San Diego, CA) for 15 min on ice to prevent test antibodies (Abs) from binding to Fc receptors, and then stained either with APC-conjugated F-MuLV gag75–83/Db tetramer, influenza virus nucleoprotein (NP)366–374/Db tetramer, or OVA257–264/Kb tetramer for 1 h at room temperature. All tetramers were generated at the Trudeau Institute Molecular Biology Core (Saranac Lake, NY). Tetramer-labeled cells were then washed and stained with FITC-, PE-, PerCP/Cy5.5-, or APC-conjugated antibodies for 30 min on ice. Antibodies reactive to the following molecules were purchased from BioLegend (San Diego, CA): CD3, CD4, CD8, CD11b, CD11c, CD19, CD44, CD69, CD80, CD90.1, CD90.2, PD-1, LAG-3, B220, Ly51, TCR Vα2, and EpCAM. Purified anti-F-MuLV envelope gp70 mAb, clone 720 [43], anti-F-MuLV gag p15 mAb, clone 34 [54], or mouse IgG1 isotype control, clone 1B7, were labeled with biotin by using NHS-PEG4-Biotin (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA) or with FITC by using Fluorescein Labeling Kit-NH2 (Dojindo Molecular Technologies, Inc., Rockville, MD) as described [55]. Labeled streptavidin was purchased from BioLegend. Samples were run on a FACSCalibur or a FACSAria (BD Biosciences). All data were analyzed with FlowJo software (Tree Star, Ashland, OR).
In vitro restimulation and intracellular cytokine staining
Splenocytes isolated from infected mice as described above were seeded in 96-well plates at a concentration of 1×106 cells per well. Cells were incubated in the presence of Alexa488-conjugated anti-CD107a (BioLegend), monensin A (BioLegend) and either F-MuLV gag75–83 peptide (5 µM), influenza NP366–374 peptide (5 µM), OVA257–264 peptide (5 µM), or anti-CD3 (4 µg/ml) (eBiosciences, San Diego, CA) for 2 h at 37°C; brefeldin A (50 µg/ml) was then added, and the incubation was continued for an additional 4 h. Surface staining for CD8 was performed as described above, and the cells were fixed and permeabilized with the Cytofix Cytoperm kit (BD Bioscience). For the detection of intracellular IFN-γ and IL-2, the cells were incubated for 15 min in the Perm/Wash buffer followed by incubation in the same buffer with anti-IFN-γ (BioLegend) and anti-IL-2 (BD Bioscience) for 1 h; the cells were then washed and analyzed as described above. To correct for background variations between experiments, we subtracted the percentage of IFN-γ+, IL-2+ or CD107a+ cells among CD8+ T cells without stimulation from the percentage of IFN-γ+, IL-2+ or CD107a+ cells following peptide stimulation, for each individual mouse.
Infectious center assays
Cells prepared from each tissue were serially diluted and plated in duplicate at concentrations between 1×102 and 1×106 cells onto monolayers of Mus dunni cells. After being washed and fixed with methanol on the second day of coculturing, cells were stained with biotinylated mAb 720, and F-MuLV-infected foci were visualized by using Elite ABC Kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) as described [21].
Immunohistochemistry
The thymuses from naïve or FV-infected animals were harvested, embedded in OCT compound (Sakura Finetek, Tokyo Japan), and frozen in liquid nitrogen. Frozen sections (6 µm) were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde for 10 min. After quenching endogenous biotin activity, sections were stained with combinations of PE-conjugated anti-CD11c, anti-ER-TR4 (specific for cortical thymic epithelial cells; cTECs), anti-ER-TR5 (specific for medullary thymic epithelial cells; mTECs) [56], biotin-conjugated anti-F-MuLV gag p15, clone 690 [57], and biotin-conjugated anti-F-MuLV gag p30, clone R18-7 [54]. Secondary antibodies, PE-conjugated anti-rat IgM, PE-conjugated anti-rat IgG, and AF488-conjugated streptavidin were used to visualize cTEC, mTEC and FV antigens, respectively. All frozen sections were observed and images recorded with a fluorescence microscope (BioZero; Keyence Japan).
Thymectomy and thymus transplantation
Day 5 neonatal pups were thymectomized. Five weeks later, mice were injected with purified anti-CD8 (2.43) and anti-CD4 (GK1.5) antibodies to deplete T cells in the periphery. A thymic lobe from FV-infected (2–3 weeks post infection) or age-matched uninfected donors was grafted under the kidney capsule. Six weeks later, mice were challenged with either FBL3 or infected with ×31.
Fetal thymus organ culture (FTOC)
Thymic stromal cells of B6AF1 mice were prepared from E15.5 fetal thymus lobes that were cultured for 5 days in the presence of 2-deoxyguanosine [22]. OT-1 DP thymocytes were sorted from adult (OT-1-Thy1.1× A/WySnJ)F1 mice. Thymocytes, thymic DCs or TECs from B6AF1 mice infected with FV-OVA 21 days prior to the preparation were sorted as third populations. CD45-negative cells were enriched by depleting CD90+ cells with a magnetic cell sorter (BD Bioscience) prior to sorting of thymic DC and TEC populations. Thymic stromal cells (2–3×105) and OT-1 DP thymocytes (3–5×105) were reaggregated and organ-cultured for 4 days in the presence of each third population (0.5–2×105) as described [22].
OT-1 cell transfer
Splenocytes from (OT-1-Thy1.1× A/WySnJ)F1 mice were enriched for CD8+ cells by negative selection using Ab-conjugated micromagnetic beads as described [58]. Cells were then stained with anti-CD44-FITC, and CD44lo cells were sorted using FACSVantage cell sorter with DIVA enhancement software (BD Bioscience). A total of 1–2×107 cells were transferred into recipient B6AF1 mice infected with either FV or FV-OVA 42 days prior to the cell transfer.
Real-Time PCR
Total RNA was purified from the spleen, BM, and thymus of FV-infected mice using RNeasy Blood & Tissue kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) and cDNA synthesis was performed by using PrimeScript RT reagent Kit (Takara Bio Inc., Shiga, Japan). The viral DNA fragments were amplified from 0.5 µg or 1 µg of total cDNA and were quantified using Platinum Quantitative PCR SuperMix-UDG with ROX (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA) and a Prism 7900HT Real-Time PCR system (Life Technologies). PCR primers and TaqMan probes for the differential detection of F-MuLV and SFFV cDNAs were designed on the env portion of each provirus: primers 5′-AAGTCTCCCCCCGCCTCTA-3′ and 5′-AGTGCCTGGTAAGCTCCCTGT-3′, and a FAM-labeled probe 5′-ACTCCCACATTGATTTCCCCGTCC-3′ for the detection of F-MuLV, and primers 5′-TCTAACCTCACCAACCCTGAT-3′ and 5′-TTTTAGGGCAATGGTATGATTAAAATAA-3′, and a FAM-labeled probe 5′-CCTAGTGTCTGGACCCCCCTATTACGAGG-3′ for the detection of SFFV [59]. After initial incubations at 50°C for 2 min and 95°C for 10 min, 40 cycles of amplification were carried out at 95°C for 30 sec and at 58°C for 1 min. A TaqMan rodent GAPDH control reagent (Life Technologies) was used as an internal control. Standard curves obtained by using plasmids containing the env gene of each virus as templates were linear over a range of 10–106 copies in the above reaction.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using Prism software (GraphPad Software, Inc., San Diego, CA). Methods of comparison and corrections for multiple comparisons are indicated in each relevant figure legend.
Accession numbers
Friend murine leukemia virus FB29 complete genome (accession number: Z11128).
Supporting Information
Zdroje
1. KaechSM, CuiW (2012) Transcriptional control of effector and memory CD8(+) T cell differentiation. Nat Rev Immunol 12: 749–761.
2. WherryEJ (2011) T cell exhaustion. Nat Immunol 12: 492–499.
3. BlackburnSD, ShinH, HainingWN, ZouT, WorkmanCJ, et al. (2009) Coregulation of CD8+ T cell exhaustion by multiple inhibitory receptors during chronic viral infection. Nat Immunol 10: 29–37.
4. ShinH, BlackburnSD, BlattmanJN, WherryEJ (2007) Viral antigen and extensive division maintain virus-specific CD8 T cells during chronic infection. J Exp Med 204: 941–949.
5. VezysV, MasopustD, KemballCC, BarberDL, O'MaraLA, et al. (2006) Continuous recruitment of naive T cells contributes to heterogeneity of antiviral CD8 T cells during persistent infection. J Exp Med 203: 2263–2269.
6. WilsonJJ, PackCD, LinE, FrostEL, AlbrechtJA, et al. (2012) CD8 T cells recruited early in mouse polyomavirus infection undergo exhaustion. J Immunol 188: 4340–4348.
7. D'SouzaWN, HedrickSM (2006) Cutting edge: latecomer CD8 T cells are imprinted with a unique differentiation program. J Immunol 177: 777–781.
8. MiyazawaM, Tsuji-KawaharaS, KanariY (2008) Host genetic factors that control immune responses to retrovirus infections. Vaccine 26: 2981–2996.
9. KimJW, ClossEI, AlbrittonLM, CunninghamJM (1991) Transport of cationic amino acids by the mouse ecotropic retrovirus receptor. Nature 352: 725–728.
10. WangH, KavanaughMP, NorthRA, KabatD (1991) Cell-surface receptor for ecotropic murine retroviruses is a basic amino-acid transporter. Nature 352: 729–731.
11. LiJP, D'AndreaAD, LodishHF, BaltimoreD (1990) Activation of cell growth by binding of Friend spleen focus-forming virus gp55 glycoprotein to the erythropoietin receptor. Nature 343: 762–764.
12. PersonsDA, PaulsonRF, LoydMR, HerleyMT, BodnerSM, et al. (1999) Fv2 encodes a truncated form of the Stk receptor tyrosine kinase. Nat Genet 23: 159–165.
13. ChesebroB, BloomM, WehrlyK, NishioJ (1979) Persistence of infectious Friend virus in spleens of mice after spontaneous recovery from virus-induced erythroleukemia. J Virol 32: 832–837.
14. DittmerU, HeH, MesserRJ, SchimmerS, OlbrichAR, et al. (2004) Functional impairment of CD8(+) T cells by regulatory T cells during persistent retroviral infection. Immunity 20: 293–303.
15. ZelinskyyG, DietzeKK, HuseckenYP, SchimmerS, NairS, et al. (2009) The regulatory T-cell response during acute retroviral infection is locally defined and controls the magnitude and duration of the virus-specific cytotoxic T-cell response. Blood 114: 3199–3207.
16. ZelinskyyG, KraftAR, SchimmerS, ArndtT, DittmerU (2006) Kinetics of CD8+ effector T cell responses and induced CD4+ regulatory T cell responses during Friend retrovirus infection. Eur J Immunol 36: 2658–2670.
17. RobertsonSJ, MesserRJ, CarmodyAB, HasenkrugKJ (2006) In vitro suppression of CD8+ T cell function by Friend virus-induced regulatory T cells. J Immunol 176: 3342–3349.
18. MyersL, MesserRJ, CarmodyAB, HasenkrugKJ (2009) Tissue-specific abundance of regulatory T cells correlates with CD8+ T cell dysfunction and chronic retrovirus loads. J Immunol 183: 1636–1643.
19. IwashiroM, MesserRJ, PetersonKE, StromnesIM, SugieT, et al. (2001) Immunosuppression by CD4+ regulatory T cells induced by chronic retroviral infection. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98: 9226–9230.
20. DietzeKK, ZelinskyyG, GibbertK, SchimmerS, FrancoisS, et al. (2011) Transient depletion of regulatory T cells in transgenic mice reactivates virus-specific CD8+ T cells and reduces chronic retroviral set points. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108: 2420–2425.
21. TakamuraS, Tsuji-KawaharaS, YagitaH, AkibaH, SakamotoM, et al. (2010) Premature terminal exhaustion of Friend virus-specific effector CD8+ T cells by rapid induction of multiple inhibitory receptors. J Immunol 184: 4696–4707.
22. NittaT, OhigashiI, TakahamaY (2013) The development of T lymphocytes in fetal thymus organ culture. Methods Mol Biol 946: 85–102.
23. BoursalianTE, GolobJ, SoperDM, CooperCJ, FinkPJ (2004) Continued maturation of thymic emigrants in the periphery. Nat Immunol 5: 418–425.
24. MakaroffLE, HendricksDW, NiecRE, FinkPJ (2009) Postthymic maturation influences the CD8 T cell response to antigen. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106: 4799–4804.
25. WherryEJ, BlattmanJN, Murali-KrishnaK, van der MostR, AhmedR (2003) Viral persistence alters CD8 T-cell immunodominance and tissue distribution and results in distinct stages of functional impairment. J Virol 77: 4911–4927.
26. SrinivasanM, FrauwirthKA (2009) Peripheral tolerance in CD8+ T cells. Cytokine 46: 147–159.
27. YoungGR, PloquinMJ, EksmondU, WadwaM, StoyeJP, et al. (2012) Negative selection by an endogenous retrovirus promotes a higher-avidity CD4+ T cell response to retroviral infection. PLoS Pathog 8: e1002709.
28. GaultonGN (1998) Viral pathogenesis and immunity within the thymus. Immunol Res 17: 75–82.
29. CollavoD, ZanovelloP, BiasiG, Chieco-BianchiL (1981) T lymphocyte tolerance and early appearance of virus-induced cell surface antigens in Moloney-murine leukemia virus neonatally injected mice. J Immunol 126: 187–193.
30. Finke D, Acha-Orbea H (2001) Immune response to murine and feline retroviruses; Pantaleo G, Walker BD, editors. New Jersey: Humana Press, Inc. 125–157 p.
31. ZanovelloP, CollavoD, RoncheseF, De RossiA, BiasiG, et al. (1984) Virus-specific T cell response prevents lymphoma development in mice infected by intrathymic inoculation of Moloney leukaemia virus (M-MuLV). Immunology 51: 9–16.
32. MarshallDJ, ParkBH, KorostoffJM, GaultonGN (1995) Manipulation of the immune response by foreign gene expression in the thymus. Leukemia 9 Suppl 1: S128–132.
33. JamiesonBD, SomasundaramT, AhmedR (1991) Abrogation of tolerance to a chronic viral infection. J Immunol 147: 3521–3529.
34. KingCC, JamiesonBD, ReddyK, BaliN, ConcepcionRJ, et al. (1992) Viral infection of the thymus. J Virol 66: 3155–3160.
35. ZajacAJ, BlattmanJN, Murali-KrishnaK, SourdiveDJ, SureshM, et al. (1998) Viral immune evasion due to persistence of activated T cells without effector function. J Exp Med 188: 2205–2213.
36. NobregaC, RoqueS, Nunes-AlvesC, CoelhoA, MedeirosI, et al. (2010) Dissemination of mycobacteria to the thymus renders newly generated T cells tolerant to the invading pathogen. J Immunol 184: 351–358.
37. NobregaC, CardonaPJ, RoqueS, Pinto doOP, AppelbergR, et al. (2007) The thymus as a target for mycobacterial infections. Microbes Infect 9: 1521–1529.
38. MillerNE, BonczykJR, NakayamaY, SureshM (2005) Role of thymic output in regulating CD8 T-cell homeostasis during acute and chronic viral infection. J Virol 79: 9419–9429.
39. EdelmannSL, MarconiP, BrockerT (2011) Peripheral T cells re-enter the thymus and interfere with central tolerance induction. J Immunol 186: 5612–5619.
40. HadeibaH, LahlK, EdalatiA, OderupC, HabtezionA, et al. (2012) Plasmacytoid dendritic cells transport peripheral antigens to the thymus to promote central tolerance. Immunity 36: 438–450.
41. BonasioR, ScimoneML, SchaerliP, GrabieN, LichtmanAH, et al. (2006) Clonal deletion of thymocytes by circulating dendritic cells homing to the thymus. Nat Immunol 7: 1092–1100.
42. VogelAB, HaasbachE, ReilingSJ, DroebnerK, KlingelK, et al. (2010) Highly pathogenic influenza virus infection of the thymus interferes with T lymphocyte development. J Immunol 185: 4824–4834.
43. RobertsonMN, MiyazawaM, MoriS, CaugheyB, EvansLH, et al. (1991) Production of monoclonal antibodies reactive with a denatured form of the Friend murine leukemia virus gp70 envelope protein: use in a focal infectivity assay, immunohistochemical studies, electron microscopy and western blotting. J Virol Methods 34: 255–271.
44. LynchWP, CzubS, McAteeFJ, HayesSF, PortisJL (1991) Murine retrovirus-induced spongiform encephalopathy: productive infection of microglia and cerebellar neurons in accelerated CNS disease. Neuron 7: 365–379.
45. JordanMS, BoesteanuA, ReedAJ, PetroneAL, HolenbeckAE, et al. (2001) Thymic selection of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells induced by an agonist self-peptide. Nat Immunol 2: 301–306.
46. MaloyKJ, PowrieF (2001) Regulatory T cells in the control of immune pathology. Nat Immunol 2: 816–822.
47. MarodonG, FissonS, LevacherB, FabreM, SalomonBL, et al. (2006) Induction of antigen-specific tolerance by intrathymic injection of lentiviral vectors. Blood 108: 2972–2978.
48. MyersL, JoedickeJJ, CarmodyAB, MesserRJ, KassiotisG, et al. (2013) IL-2-independent and TNF-alpha-dependent expansion of Vbeta5+ natural regulatory T cells during retrovirus infection. J Immunol 190: 5485–5495.
49. AntunesI, TolainiM, KissenpfennigA, IwashiroM, KuribayashiK, et al. (2008) Retrovirus-specificity of regulatory T cells is neither present nor required in preventing retrovirus-induced bone marrow immune pathology. Immunity 29: 782–794.
50. HazraR, MackallC (2005) Thymic function in HIV infection. Curr HIV/AIDS Rep 2: 24–28.
51. TakedaE, Tsuji-KawaharaS, SakamotoM, LangloisMA, NeubergerMS, et al. (2008) Mouse APOBEC3 restricts friend leukemia virus infection and pathogenesis in vivo. J Virol 82: 10998–11008.
52. HogquistKA, JamesonSC, HeathWR, HowardJL, BevanMJ, et al. (1994) T cell receptor antagonist peptides induce positive selection. Cell 76: 17–27.
53. KuwataN, IgarashiH, OhmuraT, AizawaS, SakaguchiN (1999) Cutting edge: absence of expression of RAG1 in peritoneal B-1 cells detected by knocking into RAG1 locus with green fluorescent protein gene. J Immunol 163: 6355–6359.
54. ChesebroB, BrittW, EvansL, WehrlyK, NishioJ, et al. (1983) Characterization of monoclonal antibodies reactive with murine leukemia viruses: use in analysis of strains of friend MCF and Friend ecotropic murine leukemia virus. Virology 127: 134–148.
55. Tsuji-KawaharaS, ChikaishiT, TakedaE, KatoM, KinoshitaS, et al. (2010) Persistence of viremia and production of neutralizing antibodies differentially regulated by polymorphic APOBEC3 and BAFF-R loci in friend virus-infected mice. J Virol 84: 6082–6095.
56. Van VlietE, MelisM, Van EwijkW (1984) Monoclonal antibodies to stromal cell types of the mouse thymus. Eur J Immunol 14: 524–529.
57. McAteeFJ, PortisJL (1985) Monoclonal antibodies specific for wild mouse neurotropic retrovirus: detection of comparable levels of virus replication in mouse strains susceptible and resistant to paralytic disease. J Virol 56: 1018–1022.
58. OgawaT, Tsuji-KawaharaS, YuasaT, KinoshitaS, ChikaishiT, et al. (2011) Natural killer cells recognize friend retrovirus-infected erythroid progenitor cells through NKG2D-RAE-1 interactions In Vivo. J Virol 85: 5423–5435.
59. Tsuji-KawaharaS, KawabataH, MatsukumaH, KinoshitaS, ChikaishiT, et al. (2013) Differential requirements of cellular and humoral immune responses for fv2-associated resistance to erythroleukemia and for regulation of retrovirus-induced myeloid leukemia development. J Virol 87: 13760–13774.
60. YangC, CompansRW (1997) Analysis of the murine leukemia virus R peptide: delineation of the molecular determinants which are important for its fusion inhibition activity. J Virol 71: 8490–8496.
Štítky
Hygiena a epidemiologie Infekční lékařství LaboratořČlánek vyšel v časopise
PLOS Pathogens
2014 Číslo 3
- Měli bychom postcovidový syndrom léčit antidepresivy?
- Jak souvisí postcovidový syndrom s poškozením mozku?
- Farmakovigilanční studie perorálních antivirotik indikovaných v léčbě COVID-19
- 10 bodů k očkování proti COVID-19: stanovisko České společnosti alergologie a klinické imunologie ČLS JEP
Nejčtenější v tomto čísle
- Cytomegalovirus m154 Hinders CD48 Cell-Surface Expression and Promotes Viral Escape from Host Natural Killer Cell Control
- Human African Trypanosomiasis and Immunological Memory: Effect on Phenotypic Lymphocyte Profiles and Humoral Immunity
- Conflicting Interests in the Pathogen–Host Tug of War: Fungal Micronutrient Scavenging Versus Mammalian Nutritional Immunity
- DHX36 Enhances RIG-I Signaling by Facilitating PKR-Mediated Antiviral Stress Granule Formation