Sphingosine kinase 2 regulates CD4+ T cell responses following LCMV Cl 13 infection
Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Viruses often establish persistent infections by interrupting immune cell responses. Sphingosine kinase 2 (SphK2) generates sphingosine 1-phsophate, which is known to regulate versatile cellular processes, including immune responses. However, little is known about the role of SphK2 in the immune response to viral infections. Here, we demonstrate that during lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) clone 13 infection, a virus known to establish a persistent infection in mice, SphK2 functions to limit CD4+ T cell responses, which aids in the establishment of virus-induced immunosuppression and viral persistence. The infection of SphK2-deficient (Sphk2-/-) mice with LCMV resulted in kidney disease and ultimately mortality. Following infection, Sphk2-/- mice were shown to have increased LCMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cell responses. With the use of LCMV epitope-specific TCR transgenic mouse lines in adoptive transfer studies, SphK2 was shown to have intrinsic negative function in CD4+ T cells, but not CD8+ T cells. Furthermore, Sphk2-/- CD4+ T cells were able to promote endogenous, virus-specific CD8+ T cell responses more efficiently than Sphk2+/+ CD4+ T cells. Our results suggest that SphK2 is a novel regulator of the immune response during LCMV clone 13 infection and targeting SphK2 may provide a promising immunotherapeutic strategy for the control of persistent viral infections. This study incorporated the use of RNA sequencing to determine what pathways SphK2 was involved in to affect CD4+ T cell activity and proliferation. Sphk2+/+ or Sphk2-/- LCMV epitope-recognizing tg CD4+ T cells were transferred into C57BL/6 mice and recovered 7 days following LCMV Cl 13 infection. RNA sequencing revealed several pathways upregulated in Sphk2-/- CD4+ T cells relating to cell cycle progression, regulation of transcription, and regulation of nucleic acid binding.
Project description:CD4 T cells promote innate and adaptive immune responses, but how vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells contribute to immune protection remains unclear. Here we evaluated whether induction of virus-specific CD4 T cells by vaccination would protect mice against infection with chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Immunization with vaccines that selectively induced CD4 T cell responses resulted in catastrophic inflammation and mortality following challenge with a persistent form of LCMV. Immunopathology required antigen-specific CD4 T cells and was associated with a cytokine storm, generalized inflammation, and multi-organ system failure. Virus-specific CD8 T cells or antibodies abrogated the pathology. These data demonstrate that vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells in the absence of effective antiviral immune responses can trigger lethal immunopathology. Splenic GP66-specific CD4 T cells from mice immunized with either a LMwt vaccine (sham) or LMgp61 vaccine (CD4 vaccine) were purified by FACS on day 8 post-infection with LCMV clone 13
Project description:Chronic viral infections incapacitate adaptive immune responses by 'exhausting' virus-specific T cells, inducing their deletion and reducing productive T cell memory. Viral infection rapidly induces death receptor Fas (CD95) expression by dendritic cells (DCs) making them susceptible to elimination by the immune response. Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus (LCMV) Clone 13, which normally establishes a chronic infection, is rapidly cleared in C57Black/J mice with conditional deletion of Fas in DCs. The immune response to LCMV is characterized by an extended survival of virus-specific effector T cells. Moreover, transfer of Fas-negative DCs from non-infected mice to already-infected animals results in either complete clearance of the virus or a significant reduction of viral titers. Thus, DC-specific Fas expression plays a role in regulation of anti-viral responses and suggests a strategy for stimulation of T cells in chronically infected animals and humans in order to achieve the clearance of persistent viruses. We compared gene expression between splenic DCs from B6.FasKI and B6.CD11c-Cre.FasKI mice. DCs were isolated on day 5 after LCMV infection with 3 mice in each group, for a total of 6 samples. Spleens were collagenase-DNAse digested and sorted by flow to isolate DCs.
Project description:Understanding the response of memory CD8 T cells to persistent antigen re-stimulation and the role of CD4 T cell help is critical to the design of successful vaccines for chronic diseases. However, studies comparing the protective abilities and qualities of memory and naïve cells have been mostly performed in acute infections, and little is known about their roles during chronic infections. Herein, we show that memory cells dominate over naïve cells and are protective when present in large enough numbers to quickly reduce infection. In contrast, when infection is not rapidly reduced, memory cells are quickly lost, unlike naïve cells. This loss of memory cells is due to (i) an early block in cell proliferation, (ii) selective regulation by the inhibitory receptor 2B4, and (iii) increased reliance on CD4 T cell help. These findings have important implications towards the design of T cell vaccines against chronic infections and tumors. 16 samples are analyzed: 3 replicates of secondary effector CD8 P14 T cells at day 8 post-acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection; 4 replicates of secondary effector CD8 P14 T cells at day 8 post-chronic LCMV infection; 4 replicates of primary effector CD8 P14 T cells at day 8 post-acute LCMV infection; and 5 replicates of primary effector CD8 P14 T cells at day 8 post-chronic LCMV infection.
Project description:CD4 T cells promote innate and adaptive immune responses, but how vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells contribute to immune protection remains unclear. Here we evaluated whether induction of virus-specific CD4 T cells by vaccination would protect mice against infection with chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV). Immunization with vaccines that selectively induced CD4 T cell responses resulted in catastrophic inflammation and mortality following challenge with a persistent form of LCMV. Immunopathology required antigen-specific CD4 T cells and was associated with a cytokine storm, generalized inflammation, and multi-organ system failure. Virus-specific CD8 T cells or antibodies abrogated the pathology. These data demonstrate that vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells in the absence of effective antiviral immune responses can trigger lethal immunopathology.
Project description:Chronic viral infections incapacitate adaptive immune responses by 'exhausting' virus-specific T cells, inducing their deletion and reducing productive T cell memory. Viral infection rapidly induces death receptor Fas (CD95) expression by dendritic cells (DCs) making them susceptible to elimination by the immune response. Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus (LCMV) Clone 13, which normally establishes a chronic infection, is rapidly cleared in C57Black/J mice with conditional deletion of Fas in DCs. The immune response to LCMV is characterized by an extended survival of virus-specific effector T cells. Moreover, transfer of Fas-negative DCs from non-infected mice to already-infected animals results in either complete clearance of the virus or a significant reduction of viral titers. Thus, DC-specific Fas expression plays a role in regulation of anti-viral responses and suggests a strategy for stimulation of T cells in chronically infected animals and humans in order to achieve the clearance of persistent viruses.
Project description:To identify mechanisms behind immunosuppression during virus infections, we infected mice with LCMV-Armstrong and LCMV-Clone 13 expression patterns. LCMV-Armstrong induces a T-cell reaction that resolves infection within 8-10 days, while LCMV-Clone13 generates a persisten infection through immunosuppression. We used microarray to uncover splenic gene expression patterns specific to each LCMV infection at 5, 9, and 30 days
Project description:To identify mechanisms behind immunosuppression during virus infections, we infected mice with LCMV-Armstrong and LCMV-Clone 13 expression patterns. LCMV-Armstrong induces a T-cell reaction that resolves infection within 8-10 days, while LCMV-Clone13 generates a persisten infection through immunosuppression. We used microarray to uncover splenic gene expression patterns specific to each LCMV infection at 5, 9, and 30 days C57BL6 mice, 6-10 weeks old, were infected with LCMV-Armstrong and LCMV-Clone 13 or left uninfected (naïve). At days 5, 9, and 30 whole spleens were harvested for RNA extraction and hybridization on Affymetric microarray.
Project description:LCMV Clone 13 is an arenavirus that results in a persistent viral infection in mice when delivered intravenously. It has been widely used to explore the impact of chronic viral infection on CD4 T cell responses and dissect mechanisms that regulate this. In this study we used mixed bone marrow chimeras from wildtype and cytokine reeptor deficient (gp130 or IL-6/IL-27R) mice to determine the role these cytokines on splenic CD4 T cell responses 30 days post infection
Project description:Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) is the prototypic arenavirus and a natural mouse pathogen. LCMV Armstrong, an acutely resolved strain, and LCMV Clone 13, a mutant that establishes chronic infection, have provided contrasting infection models that continue to inform the fundamental biology of T cell differentiation, regulation of exhaustion, and response to checkpoint blockade. Here, we report the isolation and characterization of LCMV Minnesota (LCMV-MN), which was naturally transmitted to laboratory mice upon cohousing with pet shop mice and shares 80-95% amino acid homology with previously characterized LCMV strains. Infection of laboratory mice with purified LCMV-MN resulted in viral persistence that was intermediate between LCMV Armstrong and Clone 13, with widely disseminated viral replication and viremia that was controlled within 15-30 days, unless CD4 T cells were depleted prior to infection. LCMV-MN responding CD8+ T cells biased differentiation towards the recently described PD1+ CXCR5+ Tim-3lo stem-like CD8+ T cell population (also referred to as T exhausted progenitors, Tpex) that effectuates responses to PD-1 blockade checkpoint inhibition, a therapy that rejuvenates responses against chronic infections and cancer. This subset resembled previously characterized PD1+ TCF1+ stem-like CD8+ T cells by transcriptional, phenotypic, and functional assays, yet was atypically abundant. LCMV-MN may provide a tool to better understand the breadth of immune responses in different settings of chronic antigen stimulation as well as the ontogeny of T exhausted progenitors and the regulation of responsiveness to PD-1 blockade.