| Literature DB >> 19014475 |
Angelika Schwanninger1, Birgit Weinberger1, Daniela Weiskopf1, Dietmar Herndler-Brandstetter1, Stephan Reitinger1, Christoph Gassner2, Harald Schennach2, Walther Parson3, Reinhard Würzner4, Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein1.
Abstract
Old age is associated with characteristic changes of the immune system contributing to higher incidence and severity of many infectious diseases. Particularly within the T cell compartment latent infection with human Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is contributing to and accelerating immunosenescence. However, latent CMV infection and reactivation usually does not cause overt symptoms in immunocompetent elderly persons indicating immunological control of disease. Little is still known about the clonal composition of CMV-specific T cell responses in donors of different age. We therefore analyzed CD8(+) T cells specific for an immunodominant pp65-derived nonamer-peptide (NLVPMVATV; CMV(NLV)) in different age-groups. Independent of donor age CMV(NLV)-specific CD8+ T cells preferentially use the V beta family 8. This family has monoclonal expansions in the majority of donors after stimulation of CD8(+) T cells with the peptide. By sequencing the CDR3 region of the T cell receptor we demonstrated that CMV(NLV)-specific, BV8(+) CD8(+) T cells share the conserved CDR3-sequence motif SANYGYT in donors of all age groups. Interestingly, a second conserved clonotype with the CDR3-sequence motif SVNEAF appears in middle-aged and elderly donors. This clonotype is absent in young individuals. The age-related clonotype SVNEAF binds to the pMHC-complex with higher avidity than the clonotype SANYGYT, which is predominant in young adults. The dominance of this high avidity clonotype may explain the lack of overt CMV-disease in old age.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19014475 PMCID: PMC2596076 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4933-5-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immun Ageing ISSN: 1742-4933 Impact factor: 6.400
Figure 1Preferential expansion of BV8 and BV13 CD8. Cells were stimulated in vitro for 14 days with CMVNLV-peptide in the presence of IL-2 and autologous, irradiated PBMC. (A) CD8+ T cells were stained with APC-conjugated pentamers containing the CMVNLV-peptide. Representative examples are shown for one young, one middle-aged and one elderly donor directly ex vivo and after 14 days of culture. Percentages of CD8+ CMVNLV-specific T cells are indicated. (B) After 14 days of culture CMVNLV-specific T cells were further purified from the expanded cells using MACS-technology. Spectratyping was performed from PCR-products of 24 individual V beta families for 31 donors (10 young, 7 middle-aged, 14 elderly). In the right panel examples for the different clonality and intensity scores (see Methods) are shown. Clonality and intensity scores are added to obtain a total score. For each BV family the percentage of donors with a total score above 5 is shown.
Figure 2Sequence analysis of the CDR3-region of BV8. PCR-products were generated of the relevant TCR-sequences and cloned into a bacterial vector. 4 arbitrarily chosen bacterial clones are shown for each donor. Two dominant sequences and a variety of individually used sequences were detected. Conserved sequences were categorized as "SANYGYT" (light grey) and "SVNEAF" (dark grey). Discordance of one or two amino acids from the conserved dominant sequences was considered as minor variation, and these clones were included in these two categories. Sequences with greater variations were considered as private clones.
Figure 3Higher antigen avidity of CMV-specific CD8. CMVNLV-specific CD8+ T cells were stimulated in vitro with CMVNLV-peptide for two weeks. Donors with a monoclonal profile of BV8+ CMVNLV-specific T cells with the CDR3-sequence SANYGYT or SVNEAF respectively were selected. BV8+ T cells were identified by FACS-staining and results are shown for BV8+ gated, CMVNLV-specific-T cells only. (A) CMVNLV-specific BV8+ T cells were stained with different concentrations of CMVNLV-pentamer. The mean fluorescence intensity (MFI; note the logarithmic scale) of bound pentamer is indicated for donors with the CDR3-sequence SANYGYT (light grey) or SVNEAF (dark grey). n = 3; mean ± SEM. * p < 0.05 (Student's t-test for unpaired data). (B) CMVNLV-specific CD8+ T cells were stained with saturated amounts of CMVNLV-pentamer (1.25 μg/ml) and the dissociation rates of pentamers from CMV-specific CD8+ T cells were determined for donors with the CDR3-sequence SANYGYT (light grey) or SVNEAF (dark grey). Dissociation of pentamers was assessed by FACS analysis at different time points (range 0–180 min). Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of pentamer-positive T cells at time point 0 (maximum pentamer binding) was considered as 100%. n = 3; mean ± SEM. * p < 0.05 (Student's t-test for unpaired data).
Gender and age of blood donors
| n | male/female | median age (years) | age range (years) | |
| young (≤ 39 y) | 10 | 4/6 | 33 | 28–37 |
| middle-aged (40–64 y) | 7 | 3/4 | 49 | 42–53 |
| elderly (≥ 65 y) | 15 | 7/8 | 70 | 65–87 |