Biosafety and Health (Oct 2023)

HLA-E-restricted Hantaan virus-specific CD8+ T cell responses enhance the control of infection in hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome

  • Kang Tang,
  • Yusi Zhang,
  • Xinyu Li,
  • Chunmei Zhang,
  • Xiaozhou Jia,
  • Haifeng Hu,
  • Lihua Chen,
  • Ran Zhuang,
  • Yun Zhang,
  • Boquan Jin,
  • Ying Ma

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 289 – 299

Abstract

Read online

Infection with the Hantaan virus (HTNV) may result in severe hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS). The functions of HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T lymphocytes in virus control and vaccine development have recently received increased attention. The purpose of this research is to discover HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T cell epitopes on HTNV as well as the features of these epitope-specific CD8+ T cells in HFRS patients. To anticipate HLA-E-restricted HTNV epitopes, the NetMHCpan servers were utilized. The K562/HLA-E cell binding test and the enzyme-linked immunospot assay were used to confirm epitope binding to HLA-E. The number and features of HLA-E-restricted epitope-specific CD8+ T lymphocytes in HFRS patients were investigated using tetramer staining, intracellular cytokine labeling, proliferation, and cytotoxicity assays. Six HTNV-derived HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T cell epitopes were found in this study. In mild/moderate HFRS patients, the frequency of HLA-E-restricted epitope-specific CD8+ T cells was greater than in severe/critical patients. CD38+HLA-DR+ HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T cells were identified. Meanwhile, CD45RA+CCR7− effector memory-re-expressing CD45RA T cells with early and intermediate maturation and differentiation characteristics predominated. Notably, CD8+ T cells from milder HFRS patients produced more interferon-γ, interleukin-2, and granzyme B, had a stronger proliferative potential, and were inversely linked with the amount of plasma HTNV virus load. Furthermore, HLA-E-restricted epitope-specific CD8+ T cells demonstrated improved cytotoxic activity in vitro during the acute stage of HFRS. Taken together, the findings demonstrate the protective effects of HLA-E-restricted CD8+ T cells during HTNV infection, suggesting that HLA-E-targeted vaccines against HTNV might be developed for HLA-diverse populations.

Keywords