PLoS ONE (Aug 2008)

Maintenance of large subpopulations of differentiated CD8 T-cells two years after cytomegalovirus infection in Gambian infants.

  • David J C Miles,
  • Marianne van der Sande,
  • David Jeffries,
  • Steve Kaye,
  • Olubukola Ojuola,
  • Mariama Sanneh,
  • Momodou Cox,
  • Melba S Palmero,
  • Ebrima S Touray,
  • Pauline Waight,
  • Sarah Rowland-Jones,
  • Hilton Whittle,
  • Arnaud Marchant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002905
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 8
p. e2905

Abstract

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In a previously published study, we found that large differentiated subpopulations of CD8 T-cells emerged rapidly after CMV infection in young infants and persisted throughout the following year. Here we describe a follow-up study conducted on the same infants to establish whether the differentiated subpopulations continued through the second year post-infection.CMV-specific cells identified using tetramers remained more activated and differentiated than the overall CD8 population. The large subpopulation of differentiated cytotoxic (CD28(-)CD62L(-)Bcl-2(low)CD95(+)perforin(+)) cells that emerged rapidly after infection remained stable after two years. No similar subpopulation was found in CMV-uninfected infants indicating that two years after infection, CMV remained a major factor in driving CD8 T-cell differentiation. Although markers of activation (CD45R0 and HLA-D) declined throughout the first year, HLA-D expression continued to decline during the second year and CD45R0 expression increased slightly. The age-related increase in IFNgamma response observed during the first year continued but was non-significant during the second year, indicating that the rate of functional improvement had slowed substantially. CONCLUSIONS / SIGNIFICANCE: The large differentiated subpopulations of CD8 T-cells that had emerged immediately after CMV infection persisted through the second year post-infection, while levels of activation and functional capacity remained fairly constant.