4.7 Article

Endogenous human cytomegalovirus gB is presented efficiently by MHC class II molecules to CD4+ CTL

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 202, Issue 8, Pages 1109-1119

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20050162

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [EY11245, R01 EY011245] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI055051, AI01644, R01 AI021640, AI055051, AI21640, R01 AI048090, AI48090] Funding Source: Medline

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Human cytomegalovirus ( HCMV) infects endothelial, epithelial, and glial cells in vivo. These cells can express MHC class II proteins, but are unlikely to play important roles in priming host immunity. Instead, it seems that class II presentation of endogenous HCMV antigens in these cells allows recognition of virus infection. We characterized class II presentation of HCMV glycoprotein B (gB), a membrane protein that accumulates extensively in endosomes during virus assembly. Human CD4(+) T cells specific for gB were both highly abundant in blood and cytolytic in vivo. gB-specific CD4(+) T cell clones recognized gB that was expressed in glial, endothelial, and epithelial cells, but not exogenous gB that was fed to these cells. Glial cells efficiently presented extremely low levels of endogenous gB-expressed by adenovirus vectors or after HCMV infection-and stimulated CD4(+) T cells better than DCs that were incubated with exogenous gB. Presentation of endogenous gB required sorting of gB to endosomal compartments and processing by acidic proteases. Although presentation of cellular proteins that traffic into endosomes is well known, our observations demonstrate for the first time that a viral protein sorted to endosomes is presented exceptionally well, and can promote CD4(+) T cell recognition and killing of biologically important host cells.

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