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Mobilizing monocytes to cross-present circulating viral antigen in chronic infection
Adam J. Gehring, … , Florent Ginhoux, Antonio Bertoletti
Adam J. Gehring, … , Florent Ginhoux, Antonio Bertoletti
Published August 1, 2013
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2013;123(9):3766-3776. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI66043.
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Research Article Immunology Article has an altmetric score of 26

Mobilizing monocytes to cross-present circulating viral antigen in chronic infection

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Abstract

Selection of antigens for therapeutic vaccination against chronic viral infections is complicated by pathogen genetic variations. We tested whether antigens present during persistent viral infections could provide a personalized antigenic reservoir for therapeutic T cell expansion in humans. We focused our study on the HBV surface antigen (HBsAg), which is present in microgram quantities in the serum of chronic HBV patients. We demonstrated by quantitative fluorescent microscopy that, out of 6 professional APC populations in the circulation, only CD14 monocytes (MNs) retained an HBsAg depot. Using TCR-redirected CD8+ T cells specific for MHC-I–restricted HBV epitopes, we showed that, despite being constantly exposed to antigen, ex vivo–isolated APCs did not constitutively activate HBV-specific CD8+ T cells. However, differentiation of HBsAg+ CD14 MNs from chronic patients to MN-derived DCs (moDCs) induced cross-presentation of the intracellular reservoir of viral antigen. We exploited this mechanism to cross-present circulating viral antigen and showed that moDCs from chronically infected patients stimulated expansion of autologous HBV-specific T cells. Thus, these data demonstrate that circulating viral antigen produced during chronic infection can serve as a personalized antigenic reservoir to activate virus-specific T cells.

Authors

Adam J. Gehring, Muzlifah Haniffa, Patrick T. Kennedy, Zi Zong Ho, Carolina Boni, Amanda Shin, Nasirah Banu, Adeline Chia, Seng Gee Lim, Carlo Ferrari, Florent Ginhoux, Antonio Bertoletti

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Figure 1

APC gating strategy and population frequency analysis in healthy donors and chronic HBV patients.

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APC gating strategy and population frequency analysis in healthy donors ...
(A) Lineage-negative (CD3/CD56/CD7) HLA-DR+ APCs were derived from total live PBMCs gated by forward and side scatter followed by single-cell gating using width and height parameters with viability dye (data not shown). CD11c mDCs, CD141 DCs, CD123 pDCs, and CD20 B cells were identified from the CD14/CD16 double-negative population. (B) Frequency of HLA-DR+ cells in total PBMCs and frequency of specific APC populations as a proportion of HLA-DR+ cells. There were no statistically significant differences determined by 1-way ANOVA and Tukey’s post-test analysis using total CHB patients; information on patients categorized by viral load and liver inflammation is displayed in Supplemental Figures 1 and 2.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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