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Induction of a Cross-Reactive CD8+ T Cell Response following Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Vaccination
Authors:Efrain Guzman  Geraldine Taylor  Bryan Charleston  Shirley A. Ellis
Affiliation:Institute for Animal Health, Compton, Newbury RG20 7NN, United Kingdom
Abstract:Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) causes a highly contagious infection in cloven-hoofed animals. Current inactivated FMDV vaccines generate short-term, serotype-specific protection, mainly through neutralizing antibody. An improved understanding of the mechanisms of protective immunity would aid design of more effective vaccines. We have previously reported the presence of virus-specific CD8+ T cells in FMDV-vaccinated and -infected cattle. In the current study, we aimed to identify CD8+ T cell epitopes in FMDV recognized by cattle vaccinated with inactivated FMDV serotype O. Analysis of gamma interferon (IFN-γ)-producing CD8+ T cells responding to stimulation with FMDV-derived peptides revealed one putative CD8+ T cell epitope present within the structural protein P1D, comprising residues 795 to 803 of FMDV serotype O UKG/2001. The restricting major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I allele was N*02201, expressed by the A31 haplotype. This epitope induced IFN-γ release, proliferation, and target cell killing by αβ CD8+ T cells, but not CD4+ T cells. A protein alignment of representative samples from each of the 7 FMDV serotypes showed that the putative epitope is highly conserved. CD8+ T cells from FMDV serotype O-vaccinated A31+ cattle recognized antigen-presenting cells (APCs) loaded with peptides derived from all 7 FMDV serotypes, suggesting that CD8+ T cells recognizing the defined epitope are cross-reactive to equivalent peptides derived from all of the other FMDV serotypes.Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) is a member of the family Picornaviridae, genus Aphthovirus. The FMDV particle consists of a positive-strand RNA molecule of approximately 8,500 nucleotides, enclosed within an icosahedral capsid. The genome encodes a unique polyprotein from which four structural proteins (P1A, P1B, P1C, and P1D; also referred to as VP4, VP2, VP3, and VP1, respectively) and nine nonstructural proteins are cleaved by viral proteases (48). FMDV shows a high genetic and antigenic variability, which is reflected in the seven serotypes and multiple subtypes reported so far (13). The virus causes a highly contagious infection in cloven-hoofed animals which is characterized by the formation of vesicles on the mouth, tongue, nose, and feet. In addition, most infected animals develop viremia.The virus elicits a rapid humoral response in both infected and vaccinated animals (26). Virus-specific antibodies protect animals in a serotype-specific manner against reinfection or against infection in the case of vaccination, and protection is generally correlated with high levels of neutralizing antibodies (38). Control of the disease is achieved by vaccination with a chemically inactivated whole-virus vaccine emulsified with adjuvant; however, this provides only short-term, serotype-specific protection (2). The introduction of this vaccine has been very successful in areas of the world where the disease is enzootic. However, one of the major difficulties in implementing vaccination is the inability to distinguish vaccinated animals from infected/recovered animals, which may still be shedding virus. Currently, a number of assays specifically developed for this purpose are being validated (29, 41), and the success of these assays is dependent on the use of purified vaccine antigen. A strategy using replication-deficient adenovirus 5 expressing FMDV antigens has been shown to provide early protection against homologous challenge (39).The identification and characterization of T cell epitopes are important for understanding protective immunity mediated by CD8+ and CD4+ T lymphocytes. Such T cell responses are pathogen specific and are restricted by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and class II molecules, which present foreign peptides to the immune system (55, 56). The role of cellular immunity in the protection of animals from FMDV is still a matter of some controversy. Specific T cell-mediated antiviral responses have been observed in cattle and swine following either infection or vaccination (3, 7, 24). CD4+ T cell responses are suggested to play an important role in protection against FMDV, and published studies demonstrate the presence of FMDV-specific MHC class II-restricted responses in cattle and pigs (22, 24). CD4+ epitopes within both P1A and P1D proteins have recently been identified in cattle (23). We have recently reported the presence of FMDV-specific, MHC class I-restricted CD8+ T cell responses in cattle following infection or vaccination. Despite these observations, the significance of cell-mediated immune responses in protective immunity to FMDV remains unclear.Cattle MHC (bovine leukocyte antigen [BoLA]) is relatively complex, with variable haplotypes expressing one, two, or three of the six classical class I genes (6, 15). At present, about 60 full-length validated cattle MHC class I cDNA sequences have been identified (www.ebi.ac.uk/ipd/mhc/bola), and the haplotypes commonly found in the Holstein breed are well characterized. We have previously identified amino acid motifs present in peptides binding to BoLA class I alleles N*02101, N*02201, and N*01301 (20). More recently, a number of Theileria parva CD8+ T cell epitopes presented through these and additional class I alleles have been described (25). Identification of such epitopes allows detailed analysis of cellular immune responses to vaccination and infection.In the present study, we aimed to identify MHC class I-restricted CD8+ T cell epitopes within the FMDV capsid protein. Using a panel of overlapping peptides, we have identified a BoLA A31-restricted epitope that is similar in all FMDV serotypes.
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