PLoS Pathogens (Oct 2015)

CD39 Expression Identifies Terminally Exhausted CD8+ T Cells.

  • Prakash K Gupta,
  • Jernej Godec,
  • David Wolski,
  • Emily Adland,
  • Kathleen Yates,
  • Kristen E Pauken,
  • Cormac Cosgrove,
  • Carola Ledderose,
  • Wolfgang G Junger,
  • Simon C Robson,
  • E John Wherry,
  • Galit Alter,
  • Philip J R Goulder,
  • Paul Klenerman,
  • Arlene H Sharpe,
  • Georg M Lauer,
  • W Nicholas Haining

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1005177
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. e1005177

Abstract

Read online

Exhausted T cells express multiple co-inhibitory molecules that impair their function and limit immunity to chronic viral infection. Defining novel markers of exhaustion is important both for identifying and potentially reversing T cell exhaustion. Herein, we show that the ectonucleotidse CD39 is a marker of exhausted CD8+ T cells. CD8+ T cells specific for HCV or HIV express high levels of CD39, but those specific for EBV and CMV do not. CD39 expressed by CD8+ T cells in chronic infection is enzymatically active, co-expressed with PD-1, marks cells with a transcriptional signature of T cell exhaustion and correlates with viral load in HIV and HCV. In the mouse model of chronic Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus infection, virus-specific CD8+ T cells contain a population of CD39high CD8+ T cells that is absent in functional memory cells elicited by acute infection. This CD39high CD8+ T cell population is enriched for cells with the phenotypic and functional profile of terminal exhaustion. These findings provide a new marker of T cell exhaustion, and implicate the purinergic pathway in the regulation of T cell exhaustion.