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1.
PLoS Pathog ; 17(1): e1009255, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33508041

RESUMEN

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) causes clinically important diseases in immune compromised and immune immature individuals. Based largely on work in the mouse model of murine (M)CMV, there is a consensus that myeloid cells are important for disseminating CMV from the site of infection. In theory, such dissemination should expose CMV to cell-mediated immunity and thus necessitate evasion of T cells and NK cells. However, this hypothesis remains untested. We constructed a recombinant MCMV encoding target sites for the hematopoietic specific miRNA miR-142-3p in the essential viral gene IE3. This virus disseminated poorly to the salivary gland following intranasal or footpad infections but not following intraperitoneal infection in C57BL/6 mice, demonstrating that dissemination by hematopoietic cells is essential for specific routes of infection. Remarkably, depletion of NK cells or T cells restored dissemination of this virus in C57BL/6 mice after intranasal infection, while dissemination occurred normally in BALB/c mice, which lack strong NK cell control of MCMV. These data show that cell-mediated immunity is responsible for restricting MCMV to hematopoietic cell-mediated dissemination. Infected hematopoietic cells avoided cell-mediated immunity via three immune evasion genes that modulate class I MHC and NKG2D ligands (m04, m06 and m152). MCMV lacking these 3 genes spread poorly to the salivary gland unless NK cells were depleted, but also failed to replicate persistently in either the nasal mucosa or salivary gland unless CD8+ T cells were depleted. Surprisingly, CD8+ T cells primed after intranasal infection required CD4+ T cell help to expand and become functional. Together, our data suggest that MCMV can use both hematopoietic cell-dependent and -independent means of dissemination after intranasal infection and that cell mediated immune responses restrict dissemination to infected hematopoietic cells, which are protected from NK cells during dissemination by viral immune evasion. In contrast, viral replication within mucosal tissues depends on evasion of T cells.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Herpesviridae/inmunología , Evasión Inmune , Inmunidad Celular , Muromegalovirus/inmunología , Animales , Linfocitos T CD8-positivos/inmunología , Linfocitos T CD8-positivos/virología , Células Madre Hematopoyéticas/inmunología , Células Madre Hematopoyéticas/virología , Infecciones por Herpesviridae/virología , Células Asesinas Naturales/inmunología , Células Asesinas Naturales/virología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos BALB C , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Muromegalovirus/genética , Muromegalovirus/fisiología , Replicación Viral
2.
PLoS Pathog ; 12(11): e1006014, 2016 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27829026

RESUMEN

Cytomegaloviruses (CMV) are highly species-specific due to millennia of co-evolution and adaptation to their host, with no successful experimental cross-species infection in primates reported to date. Accordingly, full genome phylogenetic analysis of multiple new CMV field isolates derived from two closely related nonhuman primate species, Indian-origin rhesus macaques (RM) and Mauritian-origin cynomolgus macaques (MCM), revealed distinct and tight lineage clustering according to the species of origin, with MCM CMV isolates mirroring the limited genetic diversity of their primate host that underwent a population bottleneck 400 years ago. Despite the ability of Rhesus CMV (RhCMV) laboratory strain 68-1 to replicate efficiently in MCM fibroblasts and potently inhibit antigen presentation to MCM T cells in vitro, RhCMV 68-1 failed to productively infect MCM in vivo, even in the absence of host CD8+ T and NK cells. In contrast, RhCMV clone 68-1.2, genetically repaired to express the homologues of the HCMV anti-apoptosis gene UL36 and epithelial cell tropism genes UL128 and UL130 absent in 68-1, efficiently infected MCM as evidenced by the induction of transgene-specific T cells and virus shedding. Recombinant variants of RhCMV 68-1 and 68-1.2 revealed that expression of either UL36 or UL128 together with UL130 enabled productive MCM infection, indicating that multiple layers of cross-species restriction operate even between closely related hosts. Cumulatively, these results implicate cell tropism and evasion of apoptosis as critical determinants of CMV transmission across primate species barriers, and extend the macaque model of human CMV infection and immunology to MCM, a nonhuman primate species with uniquely simplified host immunogenetics.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Citomegalovirus/transmisión , Citomegalovirus/genética , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Macaca fascicularis/virología , Macaca mulatta/virología , Animales , Infecciones por Citomegalovirus/genética , ADN Viral/análisis , ADN Viral/genética , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Filogenia , Especificidad de la Especie
3.
Sci Immunol ; 6(57)2021 03 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33766849

RESUMEN

Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) insert-expressing, 68-1 rhesus cytomegalovirus (RhCMV/SIV) vectors elicit major histocompatibility complex E (MHC-E)- and MHC-II-restricted, SIV-specific CD8+ T cell responses, but the basis of these unconventional responses and their contribution to demonstrated vaccine efficacy against SIV challenge in the rhesus monkeys (RMs) have not been characterized. We show that these unconventional responses resulted from a chance genetic rearrangement in 68-1 RhCMV that abrogated the function of eight distinct immunomodulatory gene products encoded in two RhCMV genomic regions (Rh157.5/Rh157.4 and Rh158-161), revealing three patterns of unconventional response inhibition. Differential repair of these genes with either RhCMV-derived or orthologous human CMV (HCMV)-derived sequences (UL128/UL130; UL146/UL147) leads to either of two distinct CD8+ T cell response types-MHC-Ia-restricted only or a mix of MHC-II- and MHC-Ia-restricted CD8+ T cells. Response magnitude and functional differentiation are similar to RhCMV 68-1, but neither alternative response type mediated protection against SIV challenge. These findings implicate MHC-E-restricted CD8+ T cell responses as mediators of anti-SIV efficacy and indicate that translation of RhCMV/SIV vector efficacy to humans will likely require deletion of all genes that inhibit these responses from the HCMV/HIV vector.


Asunto(s)
Linfocitos T CD8-positivos/inmunología , Reprogramación Celular/inmunología , Infecciones por Citomegalovirus/veterinaria , Citomegalovirus/inmunología , Enfermedades de los Monos/prevención & control , Síndrome de Inmunodeficiencia Adquirida del Simio/inmunología , Vacunas Virales/inmunología , Animales , Antígenos Virales/genética , Antígenos Virales/inmunología , Linfocitos T CD8-positivos/metabolismo , Reprogramación Celular/genética , Ingeniería Genética/métodos , Vectores Genéticos/genética , Inmunogenicidad Vacunal , Memoria Inmunológica , Macaca mulatta , Enfermedades de los Monos/inmunología , Enfermedades de los Monos/virología , Sistemas de Lectura Abierta/genética , Sistemas de Lectura Abierta/inmunología , Síndrome de Inmunodeficiencia Adquirida del Simio/prevención & control , Virus de la Inmunodeficiencia de los Simios/inmunología , Subgrupos de Linfocitos T/inmunología , Subgrupos de Linfocitos T/metabolismo , Eficacia de las Vacunas
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