4.6 Article

Effector CD4+ T-cell involvement in clearance of infectious herpes simplex virus type 1 from sensory ganglia and spinal cords

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 82, Issue 19, Pages 9678-9688

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01159-08

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI42815, AI054444]
  2. The Vale-Asche Foundation Fellowships in Infectious Disease Research

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In primary infection, CD8(+) T cells are important for clearance of infectious herpes simplex virus (HSV) from sensory ganglia. In this study, evidence of CD8(+) T-cell-mediated clearance of infectious HSV type 1 (HSV-1) from neural tissues was also detected. In immunocompetent mice, HSV-specific CD8(+) T cells were present in sensory ganglia and spinal cords coincident with HSV-1 clearance from these sites and remained detectable at least 8 months postinfection. Neural CD8(+) T cells isolated at the peak of neural infection secreted gamma interferon, tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-2 (IL-2), or IL-4 after stimulation with HSV antigen. HSV-1 titers in neural tissues were greatly reduced over time in CD8(+) T-cell-deficient and CD8(+) T-cell-depleted mice, suggesting that CD8(+) T cells could mediate clearance of HSV-1 from neural tissue. To examine possible mechanisms by which CD8(+) T cells resolved neural infection, CD8(+) T cells were depleted from perforin-deficient or FasL-defective mice. Clearance of infectious virus from neural tissues was not significantly different in perforin-deficient or FasL-defective mice compared to wild-type mice. Further, in spinal cords and brains after vaginal HSV-1 challenge of chimeric mice expressing both perforin and Fas or neither perforin nor Fas, virus titers were significantly lower than in control mice. Thus, perforin and Fas were not required for clearance of infectious virus from neural tissues. These results suggest that HSV-specific CD8(+) T cells are one component of a long-term immune cell presence in neural tissues following genital HSV-1 infection and play a role in clearance of infectious HSV-1 at neural sites, possibly via a nonlytic mechanism.

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