[HTML][HTML] Analysis of FOXP3+ Regulatory T Cells That Display Apparent Viral Antigen Specificity during Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection

S Li, S Floess, A Hamann, S Gaudieri, A Lucas… - PLoS …, 2009 - journals.plos.org
S Li, S Floess, A Hamann, S Gaudieri, A Lucas, M Hellard, S Roberts, G Paukovic…
PLoS pathogens, 2009journals.plos.org
We reported previously that a proportion of natural CD25+ cells isolated from the PBMC of
HCV patients can further upregulate CD25 expression in response to HCV peptide
stimulation in vitro, and proposed that virus-specific regulatory T cells (Treg) were primed
and expanded during the disease. Here we describe epigenetic analysis of the FOXP3 locus
in HCV-responsive natural CD25+ cells and show that these cells are not activated
conventional T cells expressing FOXP3, but hard-wired Treg with a stable FOXP3 phenotype …
We reported previously that a proportion of natural CD25+ cells isolated from the PBMC of HCV patients can further upregulate CD25 expression in response to HCV peptide stimulation in vitro, and proposed that virus-specific regulatory T cells (Treg) were primed and expanded during the disease. Here we describe epigenetic analysis of the FOXP3 locus in HCV-responsive natural CD25+ cells and show that these cells are not activated conventional T cells expressing FOXP3, but hard-wired Treg with a stable FOXP3 phenotype and function. Of ∼46,000 genes analyzed in genome wide transcription profiling, about 1% were differentially expressed between HCV-responsive Treg, HCV-non-responsive natural CD25+ cells and conventional T cells. Expression profiles, including cell death, activation, proliferation and transcriptional regulation, suggest a survival advantage of HCV-responsive Treg over the other cell populations. Since no Treg-specific activation marker is known, we tested 97 NS3-derived peptides for their ability to elicit CD25 response (assuming it is a surrogate marker), accompanied by high resolution HLA typing of the patients. Some reactive peptides overlapped with previously described effector T cell epitopes. Our data offers new insights into HCV immune evasion and tolerance, and highlights the non-self specific nature of Treg during infection.
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