4.7 Article

Dendritic cells initiate immune control of Epstein-Barr virus transformation of B lymphocytes in vitro

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 198, Issue 11, Pages 1653-1663

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20030646

Keywords

herpesvirus; regression assay; cross-priming; T cell; B cell

Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [N01AI40045, AI40045, AI49958] Funding Source: Medline

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The initiation of cell-mediated immunity to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been analyzed with cells from EBV-seronegative blood donors in culture. The addition of dendritic cells (DCs) is essential to prime naive T cells that recognize EBV-Iatent antigens in enzyme-linked immuno-spot assays for interferon gamma secretion and eradicate transformed B cells in regression assays. In contrast, DCs are not required to control the outgrowth of EBV-transformed B lymphocytes from seropositive donors. Enriched CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells mediate regression of EBV-transformed cells in seronegative and seropositive donors, but the kinetics of T-dependent regression occurs with much greater speed with seropositives. EBV infection of DCs cannot be detected by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction with primers specific for mRNA for the EBNA1 U and K exons. Instead, DCs capture B cell debris and generate T cells specific for EBV latency antigens. We suggest that the cross-presentation of EBV-Iatent antigens from infected B cells by DCs is required for the initiation of EBV-specific immune control in vivo and that future EBV vaccine strategies should target viral antigens to DCs.

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