Frontiers in Immunology (May 2017)

Pathogen-Reactive T Helper Cell Analysis in the Pig

  • Friederike Ebner,
  • Patrycja Schwiertz,
  • Svenja Steinfelder,
  • Robert Pieper,
  • Jürgen Zentek,
  • Nicole Schütze,
  • Christoph G. Baums,
  • Gottfried Alber,
  • Peter Geldhof,
  • Susanne Hartmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.00565
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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There is growing interest in studying host–pathogen interactions in human-relevant large animal models such as the pig. Despite the progress in developing immunological reagents for porcine T cell research, there is an urgent need to directly assess pathogen-specific T cells—an extremely rare population of cells, but of upmost importance in orchestrating the host immune response to a given pathogen. Here, we established that the activation marker CD154 (CD40L), known from human and mouse studies, identifies also porcine antigen-reactive CD4+ T lymphocytes. CD154 expression was upregulated early after antigen encounter and CD4+CD154+ antigen-reactive T cells coexpressed cytokines. Antigen-induced expansion and autologous restimulation enabled a time- and dose-resolved analysis of CD154 regulation and a significantly increased resolution in phenotypic profiling of antigen-responsive cells. CD154 expression identified T cells responding to staphylococcal Enterotoxin B superantigen stimulation as well as T cells responding to the fungus Candida albicans and T cells specific for a highly prevalent intestinal parasite, the nematode Ascaris suum during acute and trickle infection. Antigen-reactive T cells were further detected after immunization of pigs with a single recombinant bacterial antigen of Streptococcus suis only. Thus, our study offers new ways to study antigen-specific T lymphocytes in the pig and their contribution to host–pathogen interactions.

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