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1.
It was previously demonstrated that the vaccinia virus recombinants expressing the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) F, G, or M2 (also designated as 22K) protein (Vac-F, Vac-G, or Vac-M2, respectively) induced almost complete resistance to RSV challenge in BALB/c mice. In the present study, we sought to identify the humoral and/or cellular mediators of this resistance. Mice were immunized by infection with a single recombinant vaccinia virus and were subsequently given a monoclonal antibody directed against CD4+ or CD8+ T cells or gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) to cause depletion of effector T cells or IFN-gamma, respectively, at the time of RSV challenge (10 days after immunization). Mice immunized with Vac-F or Vac-G were completely or almost completely resistant to RSV challenge after depletion of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells prior to challenge, indicating that these cells were not required at the time of virus challenge for expression of resistance to RSV infection induced by the recombinants. In contrast, the high level of protection of mice immunized with Vac-M2 was completely abrogated by depletion of CD8+ T cells, whereas depletion of CD4+ T cells or IFN-gamma resulted in intermediate levels of resistance. These results demonstrate that antibodies are sufficient to mediate the resistance to RSV induced by the F and G proteins, whereas the resistance induced by the M2 protein is mediated primarily by CD8+ T cells, with CD4+ T cells and IFN-gamma also contributing to resistance.  相似文献   

2.
The M2 protein of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a protective antigen in H-2d, but not H-2b or H-2k mice. None of the other RSV proteins, excluding the surface glycoproteins that induce neutralizing antibodies, is protective in mice bearing these haplotypes. Thus, the M2 protein stands alone as a nonglycoprotein-protective antigen of RSV. The M2 protein is a target for murine Kd-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), and the resistance induced by infection with a vaccinia virus-RSV M2 (vac-M2) recombinant is mediated by CD8+ CTLs. Since the nonameric consensus sequence for H-2 Kd-restricted T-cell epitopes and the amino acid sequence of the M2 protein of subgroup A and B strains of RSV are known, the present study sought to identify the specific epitope(s) on the M2 protein recognized by CD8+ CTLs. This was done by examining the ability of four predicted Kd-specific motif peptides present in the M2 amino acid sequence of an RSV subgroup A strain to sensitize target cells for lysis by pulmonary or splenic CTLs obtained from mice infected with RSV or vac-M2. The following observations were made. First, two of the four peptides sensitized target cells for lysis by pulmonary or splenic CTLs induced by infection with either vac-M2 or RSV. Second, one of the two peptides, namely the 82-90 (M2) peptide, sensitized targets at a very low peptide concentration (10(-10) to 10(-12) M). Third, cold-target competition experiments revealed that the predominant CTL population induced by infection with vac-M2 or RSV recognized the 82-90 (M2) peptide, and this CTL population appeared to recognize the 71-79 (M2) peptide in a cross-reactive manner. Fourth, CTL recognition of targets sensitized with either the 71-79 (M2) or the 82-90 (M2) peptide was Kd restricted. Fifth, CTLs induced by infection with RSV subgroup A or B strains recognized the two M2 peptides. The findings suggest that the M2 protein of RSV contains an immunodominant Kd-restricted CTL epitope consisting of amino acid residues 82 to 90 (SYIGSINNI), which are shared by subgroup A and B RSVs.  相似文献   

3.
We have studied the immunobiology of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a major cause of respiratory tract morbidity in children. As part of these studies, it was previously found that immunization of BALB/c (H-2d) mice with a recombinant vaccinia virus (rVV) which encoded the M2 protein of RSV provided complete protection against infection with RSV. This protection was transient and associated with M2-specific CD8+ T-cell (TCD8+) responses. In this study, we used two approaches to demonstrate that expression of an H-2Kd-restricted nonameric peptide (Ser Tyr Ile Gly Ser Ile Asn Asn Ile) corresponding to M2 residues 82 to 90 is necessary and sufficient to induce protective TCD8+ responses. First, infection of mice with an rVV which encoded the peptide M2Met82-90 induced levels of primary pulmonary TCD8+ and resistance to RSV challenge equivalent to that induced by infection with an rVV which expressed the complete M2 protein. Second, elimination of peptide binding to Kd by the replacement of Tyr with Arg at amino acid position 83 of the full-length protein completely abrogated the ability of an rVV-expressing full-length M2 to induce either M2-specific TCD8+ responses or resistance to RSV infection. These findings demonstrate that the M2(82-90) peptide is the sole determinant of immunity induced in BALB/c mice by the M2 protein and that a remarkably high level of transient resistance to infection with pulmonary virus is associated with TCD8+ responses to a single determinant.  相似文献   

4.
Vaccination of children with a formalin-inactivated (FI) respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine led to exacerbated disease including pulmonary eosinophilia following a natural RSV infection. Immunization of BALB/c mice with FI-RSV or a recombinant vaccinia virus (vv) expressing the RSV attachment (G) protein (vvG) results in a pulmonary Th2 response and eosinophilia after RSV challenge that closely mimics the RSV vaccine-enhanced disease observed in humans. The underlying causes of RSV vaccine-enhanced disease remain poorly understood. We demonstrate here that RSV M2-specific CD8 T cells reduce the Th2-mediated pathology induced by vvG-immunization and RSV challenge in an IFN-gamma-independent manner. We also demonstrate that FI-RSV immunization does not induce a measurable RSV-specific CD8 T cell response and that priming FI-RSV-immunized mice for a potent memory RSV-specific CD8 T cell response abrogates pulmonary eosinophilia after subsequent RSV challenge. Our results suggest that the failure of the FI-RSV vaccine to induce a CD8 T cell response may have contributed to the development of pulmonary eosinophilia and augmented disease that occurred in vaccinated individuals.  相似文献   

5.
The nucleoprotein (NP) of influenza A virus is the dominant antigen recognized by influenza virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), and adoptive transfer of NP-specific CTLs protects mice from influenza A virus infection. BALB/c mouse cells (H-2d) recognize a single Kd-restricted CTL epitope of NP consisting of amino acids 147 to 155. In the present study, mice were immunized with various vaccinia virus recombinant viruses to examine the effect of the induction of primary pulmonary CTLs on resistance to challenge with influenza A/Puerto Rico/8/34 virus. The minigene ESNP(147-155)-VAC construct, composed of a signal sequence from the adenovirus E3/19K glycoprotein (designated ES) and expressing the 9-amino-acid NP natural determinant (amino acids 147 to 155) preceded by an alanine residue, a similar minigene NP(Met 147-155)-VAC lacking ES, and a full-length NP-VAC recombinant of influenza virus were analyzed. The two minigene NP-VAC recombinants induced a greater primary pulmonary CTL response than the full-length NP-VAC recombinant. However, NP-specific CTLs induced by immunization with ESNP(147-155)-VAC did not decrease peak virus titer or accelerate clearance of virus in the lungs of mice challenged intranasally with A/PR/8/34. Furthermore, NP-specific CTLs induced by immunization did not protect mice challenged intranasally with a lethal dose of A/PR/8/34. Sequence analysis of the NP CTL epitope of A/PR/8/34 challenge virus obtained from lungs after 8 days of replication in ESNP(147-155)-VAC-immunized mice showed identity with that of the input virus, demonstrating that an escape mutant had not emerged during replication in vivo. Thus, in contrast to adoptively transferred CTLs, pulmonary NP-specific CTLs induced by recombinant vaccinia virus immunization do not have protective in vivo antiviral activity against influenza virus infection.  相似文献   

6.
CTL play a major role in the clearance of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) during experimental pulmonary infection. The fusion (F) glycoprotein of RSV is a protective Ag that elicits CTL and Ab response against RSV infection in BALB/c mice. We used the strategy of screening a panel of overlapping synthetic peptides corresponding to the RSV F protein and identified an immunodominant H-2K(d)-restricted epitope (F(85-93); KYKNAVTEL) recognized by CD8(+) T cells from BALB/c mice. We enumerated the F-specific CD8(+) T cell response in the lungs of infected mice by flow cytometry using tetramer staining and intracellular cytokine synthesis. During primary infection, F(85-93)-specific effector CD8(+) T cells constitute approximately 4.8% of pulmonary CD8(+) T cells at the peak of the primary response (day 8), whereas matrix 2-specific CD8(+) T cells constituted approximately 50% of the responding CD8(+) T cell population in the lungs. When RSV F-immune mice undergo a challenge RSV infection, the F-specific CD8(+) T cell response is accelerated and dominates, whereas the primary response to the matrix 2 epitope in the lungs is reduced by approximately 20-fold. In addition, we found that activated F-specific effector CD8(+) T cells isolated from the lungs of RSV-infected mice exhibited a lower than expected frequency of IFN-gamma-producing CD8(+) T cells and were significantly impaired in ex vivo cytolytic activity compared with competent F-specific effector CD8(+) T cells generated in vitro. The significance of these results for the regulation of the CD8(+) T cell response to RSV is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
In previous studies, it was observed that children immunized with a formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus vaccine (FI-RSV) developed severe pulmonary disease with greater frequency during subsequent natural RSV infection than did controls. During earlier efforts to develop an animal model of this phenomenon, enhanced pulmonary histopathology was observed after intranasal RSV challenge of FI-RSV-immunized cotton rats. Progress in understanding the immunologic basis for these observations has been hampered by the lack of reagents useful in manipulating the immune response of the cotton rat. This problem prompted us to reinvestigate the characteristics of immunity to RSV in the mouse. In the present studies, extensive pulmonary histopathology was observed in FI-RSV-immunized or RSV-infected BALB/c mice upon RSV challenge, and studies to determine the relative contributions of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells to this process were undertaken. Mice previously immunized with FI-RSV or infected with RSV were depleted of CD4+, CD8+, or both T-cell subsets immediately prior to RSV challenge, and the magnitude of inflammatory cell infiltration around bronchioles and pulmonary blood vessels and into alveolar spaces was quantified. The magnitude of infiltration at each anatomic site in previously FI-RSV-immunized or RSV-infected, nondepleted animals was similar, indicating that this is not a relevant model for enhanced disease. However, the effect of T-cell subset depletion on pulmonary histopathology following RSV challenge was very different between the two groups. Depletion of CD4+ T cells completely abrogated pulmonary histopathology in FI-RSV-immunized mice, whereas it had a much smaller effect on mice previously infected with RSV. FI-RSV-immunized or RSV-infected animals depleted of CD8+ T cells had only a modest reduction of pulmonary histopathology. In addition, RSV infection induced high levels of major histocompatibility complex class I-restricted cytotoxic T-cell activity, whereas FI-RSV immunization induced a low level. These data indicate that immunization with FI-RSV induces a cellular immune response different from that induced by RSV infection, which likely played a role in enhanced disease observed in infants and children.  相似文献   

8.
The attachment (G) protein of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is synthesized as two mature forms: a membrane-anchored form and a smaller secreted form. BALB/c mice scarified with vaccinia virus (VV) expressing the secreted form develop a greater pulmonary eosinophilic influx following RSV challenge than do mice scarified with VV expressing the membrane-anchored form. To determine if a soluble form of an RSV protein was sufficient to induce eosinophilia following RSV challenge, a cDNA that encoded a secreted form of the fusion (F) protein of RSV was constructed and expressed in VV (VV-Ftm(-)). Splenocytes and lung lymphocytes from mice primed with VV-Ftm(-) produced significantly more of the Th2 cytokines interleukin-4 (IL-4) and IL-5 than did mice vaccinated with VV expressing either the native (membrane-anchored) form of the F protein or the G protein. Although mice scarified with VV-Ftm(-) developed a slight increase in the number of pulmonary eosinophils following RSV infection, the increase was not as great as that seen in VV-G-primed mice. Despite the increased IL-4 and IL-5 production and in contrast to mice primed with VV-G, mice primed with VV-Ftm(-) developed RSV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and maintained high levels of gamma interferon production. These data demonstrate that recombinant VV strains expressing soluble forms of RSV proteins induce immune responses that are more Th2-like. However, this change alone does not appear sufficient to induce vaccine-augmented disease in the face of active CD8(+) CTL populations.  相似文献   

9.
The ability of recombinant vaccinia viruses that separately encoded 9 of the 10 known respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) proteins to induce resistance to RSV challenge was studied in BALB/c mice. Resistance was examined at two intervals following vaccination to examine early (day 9) as well as late (day 28) immunity. BALB/c mice were inoculated simultaneously by the intranasal and intraperitoneal routes with a recombinant vaccinia virus encoding one of the following RSV proteins: F, G, N, P, SH, M, 1B, 1C, or M2 (22K). A parainfluenza virus type 3 HN protein recombinant (Vac-HN) served as a negative control. One half of the mice were challenged with RSV intranasally on day 9, and the remaining animals were challenged on day 28 postvaccination. Mice previously immunized by infection with RSV, Vac-F, or Vac-G were completely or almost completely resistant to RSV challenge on both days. In contrast, immunization with Vac-HN, -P, -SH, -M, -1B, or -1C did not induce detectable resistance to RSV challenge. Mice previously infected with Vac-M2 or Vac-N exhibited significant but not complete resistance on day 9. However, in both cases resistance had largely waned by day 28 and was detectable only in mice immunized with Vac-M2. These results demonstrate that F and G proteins expressed by recombinant vaccinia viruses are the most effective RSV protective antigens. This study also suggests that RSV vaccines need only contain the F and G glycoproteins, because the immunity conferred by the other proteins is less effective and appears to wane rapidly with time.  相似文献   

10.
To investigate enhanced disease associated with a formalin-inactivated (FI) respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine, we studied the pulmonary inflammatory response to RSV in BALB/c mice immunized with live RSV, FI-RSV, or combinations of the two. After RSV challenge, the number of granular cells, the ratio of CD4+/CD8+ lymphocytes, and the level of Th2-like cytokine mRNAs in the bronchoalveolar lavage specimens in mice immunized first with live RSV and then with FI-RSV were lower than that in FI-RSV-immunized mice and close to that in live RSV-immunized mice. These data suggest that prior live RSV infection prevents most of the enhanced inflammatory response seen in FI-RSV-immunized mice and might explain lack of enhanced disease in older FI-RSV-immunized children. A live RSV vaccine might similarly decrease the risk of enhanced disease with non-live RSV vaccines.  相似文献   

11.
Vaccination with formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus (FI-RSV) caused excessive disease in infants upon subsequent natural infection with RSV. Recent studies with BALB/c mice have suggested that T cells are important contributors to lung immunopathology during RSV infection. In this study, we investigated vaccine-induced enhanced disease by immunizing BALB/c mice with live RSV intranasally or with FI-RSV intramuscularly. The mice were challenged with RSV 6 weeks later, and the pulmonary inflammatory response was studied by analyzing cells obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage 4 and 8 days after challenge. FI-RSV-immunized mice had an increased number of total cells, granulocytes, eosinophils, and CD4+ cells but a decreased number of CD8+ cells. The immunized mice also had a marked increase in the expression of mRNA for the Th2-type cytokines interleukin-5 (IL-5) and IL-13 as well as some increase in the expression of IL-10 (a Th2-type cytokine) mRNA and some decrease in the expression of IL-12 (a Th1-type cytokine) mRNA. The clear difference in the pulmonary inflammatory response to RSV between FI-RSV- and live-RSV-immunized mice suggests that this model can be used to evaluate the disease-enhancing potential of candidate RSV vaccines and better understand enhanced disease.  相似文献   

12.
T cell-mediated protection against a recombinant vaccinia virus was evaluated in mice with respect to the relative contributions of CTL vs that of T cell-dependent IL and of CD4+ cells. H-2b mice primed with the wildtype of vesicular stomatitis virus serotype Indiana (VSV-IND wt) mount an in vitro measurable cytotoxic response against the nucleoprotein (NP) of VSV-IND and are protected against a challenge infection with a vaccinia-VSV recombinant virus expressing the NP of VSV-IND (vacc-IND-NP). Their protective mechanism was highly susceptible to in vivo depletion of CD8+ T cells, but resistant to CD4+ depletion or treatment with anti-IFN-gamma and anti-TNF-alpha. Surprisingly, also VSV-CTL nonresponder H-2k mice were protected against a challenging infection with vacc-IND-NP when primed with VSV-IND wt. In contrast to the CTL responder H-2b mice, this protection was highly susceptible to CD4+ T cell depletion and to anti-IFN-gamma or anti-TNF-alpha treatment, but resistant to CD8+ T cell depletion. Antibodies were not responsible because they failed to transfer protection; in contrast CD4+ T cells conferred significant protection. VSV-CTL responder H-2b and nonresponder H-2k mice were protected almost equally well against a challenge dose of 10(3) pfu vacc-IND-NP inoculated intracerebrally. However, after intracerebral challenge with 5 x 10(6) pfu vacc-IND-NP, the CTL nonresponder mice died, whereas the CTL responder mice eliminated the virus by day 5. These results collectively show that CD4+ T cell-dependent IL may mediate antiviral protection, but their efficiency is relatively weak compared with CD8-mediated protection correlating with cytotoxic activity in vitro.  相似文献   

13.
The outcome of a viral infection or of immunization with a vaccine can be influenced by the local cytokine environment. In studies of experimental vaccines against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), an increased stimulation of Th2 (T helper 2) lymphocytes was associated with increased immunopathology upon subsequent RSV infection. For this study, we investigated the effect of increased local expression of the Th2 cytokine interleukin-4 (IL-4) from the genome of a recombinant RSV following primary infection and after a challenge with wild-type (wt) RSV. Mice infected with RSV/IL-4 exhibited an accelerated pulmonary inflammatory response compared to those infected with wt RSV, although the wt RSV group caught up by day 8. In the first few days postinfection, RSV/IL-4 was associated with a small but significant acceleration in the expansion of pulmonary T lymphocytes specific for an RSV CD8(+) cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) epitope presented as a major histocompatibility complex class I tetramer. However, by day 7 the response of tetramer-positive T lymphocytes in the wt RSV group caught up and exceeded that of the RSV/IL-4 group. At all times, the CTL response of the RSV/IL-4 group was deficient in the production of gamma interferon and was nonfunctional for in vitro cell killing. The accelerated inflammatory response coincided with an accelerated accumulation and activation of pulmonary dendritic cells early in infection, but thereafter the dendritic cells were deficient in the expression of B7-1, which governs the acquisition of cytolytic activity by CTL. Following a challenge with wt RSV, there was an increase in Th2 cytokines in the animals that had previously been infected with RSV/IL-4 compared to those previously infected with wt RSV, but the CD8(+) CTL response and the amount of pulmonary inflammation were not significantly different. Thus, a strong Th2 environment during primary pulmonary immunization with live RSV resulted in early inflammation and a largely nonfunctional primary CTL response but had a minimal effect on the secondary response.  相似文献   

14.
In an effort to develop a safe and effective vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), we used Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin (LT), and LTK63 (an LT mutant devoid of ADP-ribosyltransferase activity) to elicit murine CD8(+) CTL responses to an intranasally codelivered CTL peptide from the second matrix protein (M2) of RSV. M2(82-90)-specific CD8(+) T cells were detected by IFN-gamma enzyme-linked immunospot and (51)Cr release assay in local and systemic lymph nodes, and their induction was dependent on the use of a mucosal adjuvant. CTL elicited by peptide immunization afforded protection against RSV challenge, but also enhanced weight loss. CTL-mediated viral clearance was not dependent on IFN-gamma since depletion using specific mAb during RSV challenge did not affect cellular recruitment or viral clearance. Depletion of IFN-gamma did, however, reduce the concentration of TNF detected in lung homogenates of challenged mice and largely prevented the weight loss associated with CTL-mediated viral clearance. Mice primed with the attachment glycoprotein (G) develop lung eosinophilia after intranasal RSV challenge. Mucosal peptide vaccination reduced pulmonary eosinophilia in mice subsequently immunized with G and challenged with RSV. These studies emphasize that protective and immunoregulatory CD8(+) CTL responses can be mucosally elicited using enterotoxin-based mucosal adjuvants but that resistance against viral infection may be accompanied by enhanced disease.  相似文献   

15.
Secondary exposure to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) can lead to immunopathology and enhanced disease in vaccinated individuals. Vaccination with individual RSV proteins influences the type of secondary RSV-specific immune response that develops upon challenge RSV infection, as well as the extent of immunopathology. RSV-specific memory CD4 T cells can directly contribute to immunopathology through their cytokine production. Immunization of BALB/c mice with a recombinant vaccinia virus (vv) expressing the attachment (G) protein of RSV results in pulmonary eosinophilia upon RSV challenge, whereas immunization of mice with a vv expressing the fusion (F) protein does not. We analyzed the CD4 T-cell response to an I-Ed-restricted CD4 T-cell epitope within the F protein of RSV corresponding to amino acids 51 to 66 in an effort to better understand the similarities and differences in the immune response elicited by the G versus the F protein. Vaccination with the G protein induces a mixture of RSV G-specific Th1 and Th2 cells with a restricted T-cell receptor repertoire. In contrast, we demonstrate here that immunization with the F protein elicits a broad repertoire of RSV F-specific CD4 T cells that predominantly exhibit a Th1 phenotype. However, in the absence of gamma interferon (IFN-γ), RSV F51-66-specific CD4 T cells secreted interleukin-5, and mice developed pulmonary eosinophilia after RSV challenge. IFN-γ-deficient mice exhibited decreased weight loss compared to wild-type controls, suggesting that IFN-γ exacerbates systemic disease. These data demonstrate that IFN-γ can have both beneficial and detrimental effects during a secondary RSV infection.  相似文献   

16.
DNA vaccination against persistent viral infection.   总被引:13,自引:5,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
This study shows that DNA vaccination can confer protection against a persistent viral infection by priming CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Adult BALB/c (H-2d) mice were injected intramuscularly with a plasmid expressing the nucleoprotein (NP) gene of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) under the control of the cytomegalovirus promoter. The LCMV NP contains the immunodominant CTL epitope (amino acids 118 to 126) recognized by mice of the H-2d haplotype. After three injections with 200 micrograms of NP DNA, the vaccinated mice were challenged with LCMV variants (clones 13 and 28b) that establish persistent infection in naive adult mice. Fifty percent of the DNA-vaccinated mice were protected, as evidenced by decreased levels of infectious virus in the blood and tissues, eventual clearance of viral antigen from all organs tested, the presence of an enhanced LCMV-specific CD8+ CTL response, and maintenance of memory CTL after clearance of virus infection. However, it should be noted that protection was seen in only half of the vaccinated mice, and we were unable to directly measure virus-specific immune responses in any of the DNA-vaccinated mice prior to LCMV challenge. Thus, at least in the system that we have used, gene immunization was a suboptimal method of inducing protective immunity and was several orders of magnitude less efficient than vaccination with live virus. In conclusion, our results show that DNA immunization works against a persistent viral infection but that efforts should be directed towards improving this novel method of vaccination.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Identification of a single viral T-cell epitope, associated with greater than 95% of the virus-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) activity in BALB/c (H-2d) mice (J. L. Whitton, A. Tishon, H. Lewicki, J. Gebhard, T. Cook, M. Salvato, E. Joly, and M. B. A. Oldstone, J. Virol. 63:4303-4310, 1989), permitted us to design a CTL vaccine and test its ability to protect against a lethal virus challenge. Here we show that a single immunization with a recombinant vaccinia virus-lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) vaccine (VVNPaa1-201) expressing the immunodominant epitope completely protected H-2d mice from lethal infection with LCMV but did not protect H-2b mice. Furthermore, we show that the success or failure of immunization was determined entirely by the host class I major histocompatibility glycoproteins. The difference in outcome between mice of these two haplotypes was consistent with the presence or absence in the immunizing sequences of an epitope for CTL recognition and is correlated with the induction of LCMV-specific H-2-restricted CTL in H-2d mice. Protection is not conferred by a humoral immune response, since LCMV-specific antibodies were not detectable in sera from VVNPaa1-201-immunized mice. In addition, passive transfer of sera from vaccinated mice did not confer protection upon naive recipients challenged with LCMV. Hence, the molecular dissection of viral proteins can uncover immunodominant CTL epitope(s) that can be engineered into vaccines that elicit CTL. A single CTL epitope can protect against a lethal virus infection, but the efficacy of the vaccine varies in a major histocompatibility complex-dependent manner.  相似文献   

19.

Background

A subset of the virus-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) isolated from the lungs of mice infected with human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is impaired in the ability to secrete interferon γ (IFNγ), a measure of functionality. It was suggested that the impairment specifically suppressed the host cellular immune response, a finding that could help explain the ability of RSV to re-infect throughout life.

Results

To determine whether this effect is dependent on the virus, the route of infection, or the type of infection (respiratory, disseminated, or localized dermal), we compared the CTL responses in mice following intranasal (IN) infection with RSV or influenza virus or IN or intradermal (ID) infection with vaccinia virus expressing an RSV CTL antigen. The impairment was observed in the lungs after IN infection with RSV, influenza or vaccinia virus, and after a localized ID infection with vaccinia virus. In contrast, we observed a much higher percentage of IFNγ secreting CD8+ lymphocytes in the spleens of infected mice in every case.

Conclusion

The decreased functionality of CD8+ CTL is specific to the lungs and is not dependent on the specific virus, viral antigen, or route of infection.  相似文献   

20.
Although interleukin-4 (IL-4) has been implicated in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-enhanced disease, the mechanism by which it modulates immune responses to primary RSV infection remains unclear. We have developed a system to investigate the effect of IL-4 on RSV epitope-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocyte (CTL) effector function in vivo, using an H-2K(d)-restricted RSV M2 epitope. BALB/c mice were infected with recombinant vaccinia virus (rVV) constructed to express RSV M2 protein (vvM2) alone or coexpress M2 and IL-4 (vvM2/IL-4). Splenocytes were assessed for M2-specific CTL activity in a direct (51)Cr release assay and intracellular gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) production by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. Mice infected with vvM2/IL-4 had less M2-specific primary CTL activity than those infected with vvM2. M2-specific CTL frequency, as measured by M2 peptide-induced intracellular IFN-gamma production, was diminished in the vvM2/IL-4 group, partially accounting for the reduction of CTL activity. Mice immunized with either construct were challenged intravenously with RSV 4 weeks postimmunization, and direct CTL were measured. These results demonstrate that local expression of IL-4, at the time of antigen presentation, diminishes the cytolytic activity of primary and memory CD8(+) RSV-specific CTL responses in vivo.  相似文献   

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