Cell Reports (Sep 2012)

TNF-Induced Target Cell Killing by CTL Activated through Cross-Presentation

  • Dirk Wohlleber,
  • Hamid Kashkar,
  • Katja Gärtner,
  • Marianne K. Frings,
  • Margarete Odenthal,
  • Silke Hegenbarth,
  • Carolin Börner,
  • Bernd Arnold,
  • Günter Hämmerling,
  • Bernd Nieswandt,
  • Nico van Rooijen,
  • Andreas Limmer,
  • Karin Cederbrant,
  • Mathias Heikenwalder,
  • Manolis Pasparakis,
  • Ulrike Protzer,
  • Hans-Peter Dienes,
  • Christian Kurts,
  • Martin Krönke,
  • Percy A. Knolle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2012.08.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 478 – 487

Abstract

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Viruses can escape cytotoxic T cell (CTL) immunity by avoiding presentation of viral components via endogenous MHC class I antigen presentation in infected cells. Cross-priming of viral antigens circumvents such immune escape by allowing noninfected dendritic cells to activate virus-specific CTLs, but they remain ineffective against infected cells in which immune escape is functional. Here, we show that cross-presentation of antigen released from adenovirus-infected hepatocytes by liver sinusoidal endothelial cells stimulated cross-primed effector CTLs to release tumor necrosis factor (TNF), which killed virus-infected hepatocytes through caspase activation. TNF receptor signaling specifically eliminated infected hepatocytes that showed impaired anti-apoptotic defense. Thus, CTL immune surveillance against infection relies on two similarly important but distinct effector functions that are both MHC restricted, requiring either direct antigen recognition on target cells and canonical CTL effector function or cross-presentation and a noncanonical effector function mediated by TNF.