Extensive CD4 and CD8 T cell cross-reactivity between alphaherpesviruses

L Jing, KJ Laing, L Dong, RM Russell… - The Journal of …, 2016 - journals.aai.org
L Jing, KJ Laing, L Dong, RM Russell, RS Barlow, JG Haas, MS Ramchandani, C Johnston
The Journal of Immunology, 2016journals.aai.org
The Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily includes HSV types 1 and 2 and the sequence-divergent
pathogen varicella zoster virus (VZV). T cells, controlled by TCR and HLA molecules that
tolerate limited epitope amino acid variation, might cross-react between these microbes. We
show that memory PBMC expansion with either HSV or VZV enriches for CD4 T cell lines
that recognize the other agent at the whole-virus, protein, and peptide levels, consistent with
bidirectional cross-reactivity. HSV-specific CD4 T cells recovered from HSV-seronegative …
Abstract
The Alphaherpesvirinae subfamily includes HSV types 1 and 2 and the sequence-divergent pathogen varicella zoster virus (VZV). T cells, controlled by TCR and HLA molecules that tolerate limited epitope amino acid variation, might cross-react between these microbes. We show that memory PBMC expansion with either HSV or VZV enriches for CD4 T cell lines that recognize the other agent at the whole-virus, protein, and peptide levels, consistent with bidirectional cross-reactivity. HSV-specific CD4 T cells recovered from HSV-seronegative persons can be explained, in part, by such VZV cross-reactivity. HSV-1–reactive CD8 T cells also cross-react with VZV-infected cells, full-length VZV proteins, and VZV peptides, as well as kill VZV-infected dermal fibroblasts. Mono-and cross-reactive CD8 T cells use distinct TCRB CDR3 sequences. Cross-reactivity to VZV is reconstituted by cloning and expressing TCRA/TCRB receptors from T cells that are initially isolated using HSV reagents. Overall, we define 13 novel CD4 and CD8 HSV–VZV cross-reactive epitopes and strongly imply additional cross-reactive peptide sets. Viral proteins can harbor both CD4 and CD8 HSV/VZV cross-reactive epitopes. Quantitative estimates of HSV/VZV cross-reactivity for both CD4 and CD8 T cells vary from 10 to 50%. Based on these findings, we hypothesize that host herpesvirus immune history may influence the pathogenesis and clinical outcome of subsequent infections or vaccinations for related pathogens and that cross-reactive epitopes and TCRs may be useful for multi-alphaherpesvirus vaccine design and adoptive cellular therapy.
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