4.6 Article

Peripheral loss of CD8+CD161++TCRV7•2+ mucosal-associated invariant T cells in chronic hepatitis C virus-infected patients

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
卷 46, 期 2, 页码 170-180

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/eci.12581

关键词

CD38; exhaustion; HCV infection; MAIT cells; PD-1; TCRV alpha 7.2

资金

  1. High Impact Research (HIR), University of Malaya [UM.C.625/1/HIR/139]
  2. University Malaya Fellowship Scheme [AI52731]
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Swedish Physicians against AIDS Research Foundation
  5. Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
  6. SIDA SARC
  7. VINNMER for Vinnova
  8. Linkoping University Hospital Research Fund
  9. CALF
  10. Swedish Society of Medicine

向作者/读者索取更多资源

BackgroundMucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells play an important role in innate host defence. MAIT cells appear to undergo exhaustion and are functionally weakened in chronic viral infections. However, their role in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection remains unclear. Materials and methodsWe investigated the frequency of CD8(+)CD161(++)TCR V7.2(+) MAIT cells in a cross-sectional cohort of chronic HCV-infected patients (n = 25) and healthy controls (n = 25). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were investigated for circulating MAIT cell frequency, liver-homing (CCR5 and CD103), biomarkers of immune exhaustion (PD-1, TIM-3 and CTLA-4), chronic immune activation (CD38 and HLA-DR), and immunosenescence (CD57) by flow cytometry. ResultsThe frequency of MAIT cells was significantly decreased, and increased signs of immune exhaustion and chronic immune activation were clearly evident on MAIT cells of HCV-infected patients. Decrease of CCR5 on circulating MAIT cells is suggestive of their peripheral loss in chronic HCV-infected patients. MAIT cells also showed significantly increased levels of HLA-DR, CD38, PD-1, TIM-3 and CTLA-4, besides CD57 in chronic HCV disease. ConclusionsImmune exhaustion and senescence of CD8(+)CD161(++)TCR V7.2(+) MAIT cells could contribute to diminished innate defence attributes likely facilitating viral persistence and HCV disease progression.

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