HCV-specific CD4+ T cells of patients with acute and chronic HCV infection display high expression of TIGIT and other co-inhibitory molecules

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作者
Christin Ackermann
Maike Smits
Robin Woost
Johanna M. Eberhard
Sven Peine
Silke Kummer
Matthias Marget
Thomas Kuntzen
William W. Kwok
Ansgar W. Lohse
Thomas Jacobs
Tobias Boettler
Julian Schulze zur Wiesch
机构
[1] University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,I. Department of Medicine
[2] University of Freiburg,Department of Medicine II, Medical Center
[3] University of Freiburg,University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine
[4] DZIF partner site (German Center for Infection Research),Faculty of Biology
[5] University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,Department of Transfusion Medicine, Germany
[6] Gastroenterologie und Hepatologie; Kantonsspital Aarau,undefined
[7] Benaroya Research Institute at Virginia Mason,undefined
[8] Protozoa Immunology,undefined
[9] Bernhard Nocht,undefined
[10] Institute for Tropical Medicine,undefined
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Scientific Reports | / 9卷
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摘要
The combined regulation of a network of inhibitory and activating T cell receptors may be a critical step in the development of chronic HCV infection. Ex vivo HCV MHC class I + II tetramer staining and bead-enrichment was performed with baseline and longitudinal PBMC samples of a cohort of patients with acute, chronic and spontaneously resolved HCV infection to assess the expression pattern of the co-inhibitory molecule TIGIT together with PD-1, BTLA, Tim-3, as well as OX40 and CD226 (DNAM-1) of HCV-specific CD4+ T cells, and in a subset of patients of HCV-specific CD8+ T cells. As the main result, we found a higher expression level of TIGIT+ PD-1+ on HCV-specific CD4+ T cells during acute and chronic HCV infection compared to patients with spontaneously resolved HCV infection (p < 0,0001). Conversely, expression of the complementary co-stimulatory receptor of TIGIT, CD226 (DNAM-1) was significantly decreased on HCV-specific CD4+ T cells during chronic infection. The predominant phenotype of HCV-specific CD4+ T cells during acute and chronic infection was TIGIT+, PD-1+, BTLA+, Tim-3−. This comprehensive phenotypic study confirms TIGIT together with PD-1 as a discriminatory marker of dysfunctional HCV-specific CD4+ T cells.
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