Tonsillar cytotoxic CD4 T cells are involved in the control of EBV primary infection in children

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作者
María Eugenia Amarillo
Agustina Moyano
Natalia Ferressini Gerpe
Elena De Matteo
Maria Victoria Preciado
Paola Chabay
机构
[1] Multidisciplinary Institute for Investigation in Pediatric Pathologies (IMIPP),Molecular Biology Laboratory, Pathology Division
[2] CONICET-GCBA,Pathology Division
[3] Ricardo Gutierrez Children′s Hospital,undefined
[4] Ricardo Gutierrez Children′s Hospital,undefined
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Scientific Reports | / 14卷
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摘要
CD4 T cells play a key role in Epstein Barr virus (EBV) infection, by modulating latent antigen expression, and exhibiting cytotoxic and regulatory properties. Our aim was to evaluate the presence of Granzyme B (GZMB) and Foxp3 CD4 T cells at different EBV infection status and latency profiles. We examined CD4, GZMB, Foxp3, IL10, TGF-β, CD4-GZMB and CD4-Foxp3 expression at the tonsils of pediatric patients with different infective status and EBV latency profiles. CD4+, GZMB+, Foxp3+, CD4-GZMB+ and CD4-Foxp3+ cell counts were higher at the interfollicular region. Higher expression of CD4-GZMB was found in primary infected patients compared to healthy carriers. In patients that expressed latency III antigens, we demonstrated lower CD4+, CD4-GZMB+, CD4-Foxp3+ expression; a negative correlation between the immunoregulatory cytokine IL-10+ and GZMB+ as well as a positive correlation of IL-10+ and CD4+. In patients expressing the lytic protein BMRF1, a positive correlation of TGF-β+ with CD4-GZMB+ and CD4-Foxp3+ was observed. Our findings indicate that CD4-GZMB+ cells are involved in the restriction of primary EBV infection in pediatric patients, which could partially explain the lack of symptoms, whereas both CD4-GZMB+ and CD4-Foxp3+ cells could be involved in the modulation of latency.
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