eLife (Nov 2015)

Bystander hyperactivation of preimmune CD8+ T cells in chronic HCV patients

  • Cécile Alanio,
  • Francesco Nicoli,
  • Philippe Sultanik,
  • Tobias Flecken,
  • Brieuc Perot,
  • Darragh Duffy,
  • Elisabetta Bianchi,
  • Annick Lim,
  • Emmanuel Clave,
  • Marit M van Buuren,
  • Aurélie Schnuriger,
  • Kerstin Johnsson,
  • Jeremy Boussier,
  • Antoine Garbarg-Chenon,
  • Laurence Bousquet,
  • Estelle Mottez,
  • Ton N Schumacher,
  • Antoine Toubert,
  • Victor Appay,
  • Farhad Heshmati,
  • Robert Thimme,
  • Stanislas Pol,
  • Vincent Mallet,
  • Matthew L Albert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.07916
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

Read online

Chronic infection perturbs immune homeostasis. While prior studies have reported dysregulation of effector and memory cells, little is known about the effects on naïve T cell populations. We performed a cross-sectional study of chronic hepatitis C (cHCV) patients using tetramer-associated magnetic enrichment to study antigen-specific inexperienced CD8+ T cells (i.e., tumor or unrelated virus-specific populations in tumor-free and sero-negative individuals). cHCV showed normal precursor frequencies, but increased proportions of memory-phenotype inexperienced cells, as compared to healthy donors or cured HCV patients. These observations could be explained by low surface expression of CD5, a negative regulator of TCR signaling. Accordingly, we demonstrated TCR hyperactivation and generation of potent CD8+ T cell responses from the altered T cell repertoire of cHCV patients. In sum, we provide the first evidence that naïve CD8+ T cells are dysregulated during cHCV infection, and establish a new mechanism of immune perturbation secondary to chronic infection.

Keywords