PLoS ONE (Jan 2007)

"Negative vaccination" by specific CD4 T cell tolerisation enhances virus-specific protective antibody responses.

  • Karl S Lang,
  • Ahmed N Hegazy,
  • Philipp A Lang,
  • Bruno Eschli,
  • Max Löhning,
  • Hans Hengartner,
  • Rolf M Zinkernagel,
  • Mike Recher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 11
p. e1162

Abstract

Read online

BACKGROUND: Cooperation of CD4+ T helper cells with specific B cells is crucial for protective vaccination against pathogens by inducing long-lived neutralizing antibody responses. During infection with persistence-prone viruses, prolonged virus replication correlates with low neutralizing antibody responses. We recently described that a viral mutant of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), which lacks a T helper epitope, counterintuitively induced an enhanced protective antibody response. Likewise, partial depletion of the CD4+ T cell compartment by using anti-CD4 antibodies enhanced protective antibodies. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we have developed a protocol to selectively reduce the CD4+ T cell response against viral CD4+ T cell epitopes. We demonstrate that in vivo treatment with LCMV-derived MHC-II peptides induced non-responsiveness of specific CD4+ T cells without affecting CD4+ T cell reactivity towards other antigens. This was associated with accelerated virus-specific neutralizing IgG-antibody responses. In contrast to a complete absence of CD4+ T cell help, tolerisation did not impair CD8+ T cell responses. CONCLUSIONS: This result reveals a novel "negative vaccination" strategy where specific CD4+ T cell unresponsiveness may be used to enhance the delayed protective antibody responses in chronic virus infections.