Yichuan Wang1, Yongjun Sui1, Shingo Kato1, Alison E Hogg2, Jason C Steel3, John C Morris4, Jay A Berzofsky1. 1. Vaccine Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. 2. 1] Vaccine Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA [2] Aeras, 1405 Research Boulevard, Rockville, Maryland 20850, USA. 3. 1] The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4120, Australia [2] Gallipoli Medical Research Foundation, Greenslopes, Queensland 4120, Australia. 4. University of Cincinnati Cancer Institute, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267, USA.
Abstract
The structured lymphoid tissues are considered the only inductive sites where primary T-cell immune responses occur. The naïve T cells in structured lymphoid tissues, once being primed by antigen-bearing dendritic cells, differentiate into memory T cells and traffic back to the mucosal sites through the bloodstream. Contrary to this belief, here we show that the vaginal type-II mucosa itself, despite the lack of structured lymphoid tissues, can act as an inductive site during primary CD8(+) T-cell immune responses. We provide evidence that the vaginal mucosa supports both the local immune priming of naïve CD8(+) T cells and the local expansion of antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells, thereby demonstrating a different paradigm for primary mucosal T-cell immune induction.
The structured lymphoid tissues are considered the only inductive sites where primary T-cell immune responses occur. The naïve T cells in structured lymphoid tissues, once being primed by antigen-bearing dendritic cells, differentiate into memory T cells and traffic back to the mucosal sites through the bloodstream. Contrary to this belief, here we show that the vaginal type-II mucosa itself, despite the lack of structured lymphoid tissues, can act as an inductive site during primary CD8(+) T-cell immune responses. We provide evidence that the vaginal mucosa supports both the local immune priming of naïve CD8(+) T cells and the local expansion of antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells, thereby demonstrating a different paradigm for primary mucosal T-cell immune induction.
Lying at the interface between host and environment, mucosal tissue acts as
the port of entry for multiple pathogens. During viral transmission through mucosal
tissues, the presence of local antigen (Ag)-specific immune cells is considered to
help control infections by multiple viruses, such as Influenza Virus (Flu)
[1-3], Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
[4-8], Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV)
[9-11] and Herpes-Simplex Virus (HSV) [12-15]. Although the mucosal local Ag-specific T cells play an
important role to protect against viral transmission, the mechanisms through which
the local Ag-specific T cell immunity can be generated in mucosal tissues,
especially in type-II mucosa (found in vagina, glans penis & esophagus)
[16-19], remain to be elucidated.It is widely believed that primary immune T cell induction in type-II mucosa
occurs only in the draining lymph nodes (DLNs) but not in the mucosa itself due to a
lack of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) or secondary lymphoid tissues
[16-19]. In this process, the naïve T cells
in DLNs are primed by the antigen (Ag)-bearing dendritic cells (DCs) migrating from
the Ag-exposed mucosa and differentiate into memory T cells that are then able to
traffic back to mucosal sites through the bloodstream [20-23]. It has been shown that local secondary immune responses can
protect against viral infection [24-26], and that
protective vaginal immunity can occur in lymph node-deficient mice [13], as well as that lymphoid clusters
can form in virus-infected vaginal mucosa [15],. However, whether a primary immune response can be induced
locally in the type-II mucosal tissues without help from any distant tissue or
lymphoid site remains a fundamental question to be answered.In the current study, we develop a unique dual transfer model, by which we
clearly demonstrate that adoptively transferred naïve OT-I
CD8+ T cells are activated in the vaginal mucosa but not in
the DLNs 24 hours after Ivag immunization under conditions where cells from the
circulation or DLNs can not reach the vaginal mucosa. Even without adoptive
transfer, antigen-specific CD8+ T cell activation is found to
occur locally in the vaginal mucosa after vaginal immunization before it occurs in
DLNs. In addition, the immunized vaginal tissue can induce naïve OT-I
CD8+ T cell activation that is largely dependent on local
antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Finally, vaginal mucosa also supports the local
expansion of Ag-specific CD8+ T cells. In conclusion, we present
evidence of a new paradigm for primary CD8+ T cell immune
induction in type-II mucosa of the vagina, one that occurs locally without the help
of draining LNs, MALT or any other tissue site of priming, thereby providing a new
rationale for local mucosal immunization.
Results
DLN-independent priming of CD8+ T cells in vaginal
mucosa
Our study started with our observation that Ivag-immunized LN-deficient
lymphotoxin-alpha knock out (LTα KO) mice [27, 28] could still be immunized Ivag despite lack of DLNs. To test
the necessity of DLNs for vaginal CD8+ T cell immune
induction, we used a replication-deficient adenovirus-5 expressing the hen
ovalbumin (OVA) immunodominant Kb-restricted SIINFEKL peptide
(rAd5-SIINFEKL) to Ivag immunize the LN-deficient lymphotoxin-alpha knock out
(LTα KO) mice [27, 28] (Fig. 1a) and measured the vaginal SIINFEKL-specific
CD8+ T cells 14 days post-immunization (PI).
Significantly elevated levels of SIINFEKL-specific CD8+ T
cells could be detected in the vaginal mucosa of LTα KO mice (Fig. 1b, c), although the percentage was
lower than that in wild-type (WT) animals. To understand the vaginal T cell
distribution after Ivag immunization, we examined the vaginal tissue sections
and found that immunization-induced CD3+ cell clusters formed
in both WT and LTα KO mice (Fig.
1d). To further identify the phenotype of cluster-forming cells, we
stained CD8 and CD11c on the consecutively cut tissue sections right next to
each other. The adjacent tissue section staining showed that the
CD3+ cell clusters in the immunized mice also contained
CD8+ and CD11c+ cells (Fig. 1d). In contrast to the immunized mice, the
vaginal CD3+ cells in naïve animals did not form
clusters, but rather they were present sporadically as isolated cells in lamina
propria and epithelium (Fig. 1d). These
results clearly demonstrated that primary Ivag immunization could induce the
LN-independent Ag-specific CD8+ T cell immune response
associated with the immune cell aggregation, i.e. the formation of inducible
vaginal lymphoid tissue (IVALT). Although the IVALT-associated Ag-specific
CD8+ T cell response can be induced in the vaginal mucosa
independent of LNs, consistent with the recent findings on protective immunity
of Roth et al [13], we still do
not know whether these Ag-specific CD8+ T cells are derived
from the primed local naïve T cells in the vaginal mucosa or they
migrate from other non-lymphoid tissue compartments, such as liver [29-31]. To test whether or not the vaginal
mucosa itself could act as an inductive site for the primary
CD8+ T cell immune responses, we wanted to determine
whether a primary CD8+ T cell response could be generated
locally in the vaginal mucosa of WT mice.
Figure 1
Vaginal Ag-specific CD8+ T cell immune responses in
LTα KO LN-deficient mice
(a to c) The percentage of SIINFEKL-specific CD8+
T cells in the vaginal mucosa of both LTα KO LN-deficient mice and WT
mice. This is representative of 2 independently repeated experiments
(n=3 per naïve control group; n=4 per immunized group)
with the same results. (a) Experimental design. (b)
The gating strategy. (c) The percentage (mean ± SEM) of
SIINFEKL-specific vaginal CD8+ T cells in each group. The p
value was generated using Student’s t test.
(d) Representative IHC staining showing the formation of immune
cell clusters containing CD3+, CD8+ and
CD11c+ cells in the immunized WT and LTαKO mice.
Scale bar: 100 μm in 40X photomicrographs; 400 μm in 10X
photomicrographs.
The availability of naïve CD8+ T cells in vaginal
mucosa
Because the availability of naïve T cells is a prerequisite for
the generation of primary T cell immune responses, we first assessed whether
naïve CD8+ T cells were present in the vaginal
mucosa. To ensure the CD8+ T cells we identified from the
digested vaginal tissue were the interstitial cells, we IV injected
fluorochrome-labeled Thy1.2 antibody at a dose of 25 ng/mouse that could stain
all the T cells in the blood collected from retro-orbital plexus within 1 minute
(Supplementary Fig.
1a), which means all the vasculature T cells can be stained by this
method. Using the intravascular T cell staining [32], we can clearly distinguish the
interstitial T cells from the blood T cells, although some of the tissue
residing cells might be stained by the antibody that leaks out from the
capillaries, so the unstained cells represent a lower limit on the number of
tissue-residing cells. In digested vaginal tissues, we found that around
86% (median = 86.7%) of naïve
CD8+ T cells (CD62Lhigh/CD44low)
were present extra-vascularly, that is, in the vaginal mucosal parenchyma, but
not in associated vasculature (Supplementary Fig. 1a, b).We then examined the phenotype of vaginal CD8+ T cells
from mice treated either with or without FTY720, a sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P)
receptor agonist, which inhibits lymphocyte egress from both thymus and lymph
nodes [33] (Fig. 2). In FTY720-untreated mice, 44%
(44.7% ± 4.1%; mean ± SEM) of vaginal
CD8+ T cells showed a naïve phenotype
characterized as CD62L+, CD44low and lacking CD25
and CD69 expression (Fig. 2b, c). Four days
after FTY720 treatment, the naïve CD8+ T cell
population in the vaginal mucosa was lost (Fig.
2b, c).
Figure 2
The phenotype and distribution of CD8+ T cells in vaginal
mucosa of WT mice with or without FTY720 treatment
(a to c) The naïve CD8+ T cells in the
vaginal mucosa of WT mice with depo-provera synchronized estrous cycle. This is
representative of 3 independently repeated experiments (n=5) with the
same results. (a) Experimental design. (b) The gating
strategy to identify vaginal naïve CD8+ T cells.
(c) The percentage (mean ± SEM) of naïve
CD8+ T cells in vaginal mucosa with or without FTY720
treatment. (d to e) Representative results of vaginal IHC staining
showing the distribution of C8β+ cells in vaginal
lamina propria and epithelium. (d) Representative IHC
photomicrographs showing the CD8 β+ cell in both
vaginal epithelium and lamina propria of the mice treated either with or without
FTY720 (Scale bar: 400 μm). (e) The ratio of LP
C8β+ cells/IEP C8β+
cells summarized from the pool of 3 independently repeated experiments
(n=15). The numbers of LP and IEP C8β+ cells
were counted from 3 vaginal tissue sections from each animal. To avoid counting
the same cell multiple times on adjacent tissue sections, we selected the slides
with the vaginal tissue sections that were cut 25 μm apart based the
diameter of T cells (5–20 μm)[63]. The p value was generated using a
Student’s t test.
To determine the location of CD8+ T cells in vaginal
mucosa, we assayed the number of vaginal CD8β+ cells
in the mice either with or without FTY720 treatment by immunohistochemistry
(Fig. 2d, e). In FTY720 treated
animals, the ratio of lamina propria (LP) CD8β+
cells/intraepithelial (IEP) CD8β+ cells significantly
decreased (p < 0.0001 by a Student’s t test) from
2.03±0.097 (mean ± SEM) to 0.53±0.059 (Fig. 2d, e). Although it is difficult to count and
compare the absolute number of total CD8+ T cell in both LP
and IEP due to the sporadic cell distribution, the lower LP/IEP ratio in
FTY720-treated animals is highly suggestive of FTY720-induced vaginal
naïve T cell depletion occurring to a greater extent in the LP. Even
though naïve lymphocytes are known to preferentially recirculate among
the secondary lymphoid organs [34,
35], there is increasing
evidence showing that CD8+ recent thymic emigrants (RTEs)
migrate directly into the small intestine and that naïve T and B
lymphocytes are present in multiple peripheral tissue compartments [36-39]. Therefore, our data demonstrated that
naïve CD8+ T cells routinely migrated into the
vaginal mucosal LP and the maintenance of this population depended on the
lymphocyte recirculation or replenishment from the bloodstream.
Naïve T cell vaginal mucosal priming 24 hr post Ivag vaccine
To determine whether the naïve CD8+ T cells
could be primed locally in the vaginal mucosa of WT mice, independent of DLNs,
we developed a dual-transfer model (Fig.
3a). We isolated CD8+ T cells from Rag1 KO OT-I
transgenic C57BL/6 mice that solely express a T cell receptor
(TCR) recognizing the ovalbumin peptide SIINFEKL-H-2Kb complex. We
depleted CD44high cells from the OT-I CD8+ T cells
to enrich the naïve population (CD44low and
CD62L+) to 98.5% (Fig. 3a). Identical aliquots of the naïve OT-I
CD8+ T cells were labeled with either CFSE (green) or
violet dye and adoptively transferred either Ivag or IV, respectively, into the
same recipient mouse that had been Ivag immunized either 8 hours (Fig. 3b) or 32 hours (Fig. 4a) earlier with SIINFEKL peptide plus DOTAP, a cationic
liposome facilitating MHC-I-restricted Ag presentation, and mutant labile toxin
(mLT), a mucosal adjuvant. To further block lymphocyte recirculation, we also
gave each mouseFTY720 at 24 hours before euthanasia, which decreased the number
of blood CD8+ T cells to background levels from 8–24
hours post treatment (Fig. 3a).
Figure 3
The CD69 expression of Ivag vs IV transferred naïve OT-I
CD8+ T cells in wild type and LN-deficient LTαKO
mice at 24 hours PI
(a) The dual transfer model. (b)The experimental
design. (c to e) The CD69 expression of transferred naïve
OT-I CD8+ T cells in the vaginal mucosa and iliac LNs of WT
mice. This is representative of 3 independently repeat experiments (n=5
for WT animals; n=3 for LTαKO animals) with the same results.
(c) The total and CD69-expressing transferred naïve
OT-I CD8+ T cell in the vaginal mucosa. (d) The
total and CD69-expressing transferred naïve OT-I CD8+
T cell in the iliac LNs. (e) The percentage (mean ± SEM) of CD69
expression in each group. (f to h) The total and CD69-expressing
transferred naïve OT-I CD8+ T cells in the vaginal
mucosa and liver of LN-deficient LTαKO mice. This is representative of 2
independently repeated experiments with the same results. (f) The
total and CD69-expressing transferred naïve OT-I CD8+
T cell in vaginal mucosa of LTα KO mice. (g) The total and
CD69-expressing transferred naïve OT-I CD8+ T cell in
liver of LTαKO mice. (h) The percentage (mean ±
SEM) of CD69 expression in each group. The p value was generated using a
Student’s t test.
Figure 4
The CD69 expression of Ivag vs IV transferred OT-I CD8+ T cells in
vaginal mucosa and iliac LNs at 48 hours PI
(a) The experimental design. (b) The total and
CD69-expressing transferred OT-I CD8+ T cells in vaginal
mucosa. (c) The total and CD69-expressing transferred OT-I
CD8+ T cells in iliac LNs. (d) The
percentage (mean ± SEM) of CD69+ OT-I
CD8+ T cells in each group. This is representative of 2
independently repeated experiments (n=5 per naïve group;
n=4 per immunized group) with the same results. P value was generated
using a Student’s t test.
To validate the reliability of our dual transfer system, we tested the
effectiveness of T cell recirculation blockage mediated by FTY720 treatment. WT
mice received FTY720 IP injection followed by IV-transferred, CFSE labeled
naïve CD8+ T cells (5×106/mouse)
at 8 hours after FTY720 treatment. Sixteen hours after adoptive transfer, we
collected and combined 5 vaginal tissues from the mice that had received either
naïve CD8+ T cells, or naïve
CD8+ T cells plus FTY720 or PBS. The transferred
naïve CD8+ T cells were examined using flow cytometry
and no CFSE+ events were noted in the vaginal tissues from
the FTY720 treated mice, whereas they were clearly detected in the absence of
FTY720. This is direct evidence that FTY720 completely blocked the naïve
CD8+ T cell vaginal infiltration from the blood stream
(Supplementary Fig.
2).We investigated the vaginal CD8+ T cell immune
priming at 24 hours post immunization (PI) (16 hours after dual transfer) (Fig. 3b). In the vaginal mucosa, the only
detectable transferred population was the green CFSE-labeled cell population
injected directly into the vaginal mucosa (Fig.
3c). The percentage of green CFSE labeled OT-I
CD8+ T cells out of total vaginal CD8+
T cells was about 50% (51.2% ± 4.9%; mean
± SEM), which means the number of transferred naïve
CD8+ T cells within the vaginal tissue was similar to
that of the endogenous CD8+ T cells (i.e., physiological
levels) (Fig. 3c). The CD69 expression of
Ivag-transferred cells was significantly higher in the Ivag-immunized mice
(84% ± 2.9%; mean ± SEM) than the naïve
control animals (10.9% ± 2.7%; mean ± SEM) (p
< 0.0001 by a Student’s t test) (Fig. 3c, e), indicating that these cells were primed
by the Ivag immunization. Since the violet-labeled IV-transferred cells were not
detectable in the vaginal mucosa 24 hours after immunization (Fig. 3c), there were no transferred T cells entering
the vaginal mucosa through the bloodstream in the presence of FTY720. Therefore,
the green CD69+ Ivag-transferred cells would not yet have
been able to traffic back to vaginal mucosa from the DLNs (or any other tissue)
where they could potentially have been activated. Thus, the
CD69+ green Ivag-transferred cells in the vaginal mucosa
had to be primed locally. For comparison, the draining iliac LN contained both
IV-transferred and Ivag-transferred cells (Fig.
3d). The IV-transferred cells showed similar low levels of CD69
expression in the immunized as in the naïve animals, indicating a lack
of priming in the DLN by the Ivag immunization at 24 hours. In contrast, the
CD69 expression of the green Ivag-transferred cells was significantly higher in
the immunized mice than unimmunized mice. Since the violet-labeled
IV-transferred cells had not been activated in the iliac LN by 24 hours PI,
those green CD69+ Ivag-transferred cells in iliac LNs would
not have been activated in the LNs, but should be the ones activated in the
vaginal mucosa that then migrated into the DLNs.For further confirmation, we also performed a similar dual-transfer
study in LN-deficient lymphotoxin-alpha knock out (LTα KO) mice
[27, 28] (Fig. 3f,
g, h). Similar to what was observed in WT mice, the green
Ivag-transferred cells within the vaginal mucosa were activated at 24 hours PI
without any evidence of any T cell vaginal homing through the bloodstream
(violet IV-transferred cells) (Fig. 3f, h).
Because the LTα KO mice don’t develop any LNs, we checked the
liver that also possesses multiple immune functions [29]. Similar to what has been shown by other
groups [30, 31], the immune priming, characterized by
the expression of CD69 on IV-transferred violet cells, was detected in liver
that contained only IV-transferred violet cells, but not Ivag-transferred green
cells (Fig. 3g, h). Even though the
naïve CD8+ T cells were able to be activated in
liver, none of the liver-primed (violet) CD8+ T cells could
enter the vaginal mucosa (Fig. 3f, h).
Direct priming in the vaginal mucosa was further confirmed in a second
LN-deficient mouse model, CXCR5 KO mice [40], in which the Ivag transferred green cells could be
primed locally in vaginal mucosa while no violet cells from the blood had
entered the mucosa (Supplementary Fig. 3). Thus, the data from both WT and LN-deficient
mice clearly demonstrated that the Ivag-transferred naïve
CD8+ T cells could be primed locally in this type-II
mucosa, without any signs of LN immune priming and/or the trafficking of
CD8+ T cells through the blood from any other tissue site
to the vaginal mucosa. Therefore, we conclude that the naïve
CD8+ T cells could be primed locally in the vaginal
mucosa independent of LNs, contrary to the well-accepted paradigm.
Naïve T cell vaginal mucosal priming 48 hr post Ivag vaccine
To characterize the kinetics of immune priming in vaginal mucosa and in
draining LNs, we extended our observations to 48 hour PI (Fig. 4a). In the vaginal mucosa, still containing no
violet IV-transferred cells, the green Ivag-transferred cells still remained
activated, although at a lower level than observed at 24 hours PI (Fig. 4b, d). In the iliac LN, the violet IV
transferred cells started being activated by 48 hours, as assessed by the high
level of CD69 in the immunized compared to unimmunized mice (Fig. 4c, d). The ability to detect priming of violet
IV-transferred cells in the DLN at 48 hours may be due to the migration of
vaginal Ag-bearing DCs to the draining LNs by 48 hours. Therefore, the
Ag-specific immune activation of naive CD8+ T cells could
take place in both vaginal mucosa and DLNs at 48 hours PI, but also at this time
point, priming in the DLN could not account for primed T cells in the vaginal
mucosa in the presence of FTY720, as no IV transferred cells were yet able to
enter the vaginal mucosa (Fig. 4b).
Naïve vaginal T cell priming under physiological conditions
The dual transfer study clearly demonstrated that the immune priming of
naïve vaginal CD8+ T cells could be a completely
local process (Fig. 3 and Fig. 4). We further confirmed whether local immune
priming could occur in completely intact vaginal mucosa without adoptive
transfer of the T cells. We studied the Ag-specific immune activation of vaginal
CD8+ T cells in Ivag-immunized Rag-I KO, OT-I transgenicmice (Fig. 5). At 8 hours after
immunization, the CD69 expression of CD8+ T cells could be
detected only in vaginal mucosa but not in DLNs (iliac LNs) (Fig. 5a, b) or in any other tissue compartments
including axillary LNs, inguinal LNs, spleen and lung (Supplementary Fig. 4). Thus, the
CD69 expressing CD8+ T cells detected at 8 hours after
immunization provided supportive evidence that immune priming is likely to be a
local process occurring in the vaginal mucosa but not in the DLNs. In contrast,
only at 12 hours after immunization, priming was starting to occur in the DLNs
(Fig. 5a, b). Thus, the kinetics
support our conclusion from the dual transfer studies (Fig. 3 and Fig.
4) that priming can occur directly in the vaginal mucosa without
requiring migration of cells primed in the DLN. Also, we see again that priming
in the DLN occurs later than in the mucosa. To further confirm that the CD69
expressing CD8+ T cells originated from the phenotypically
naïve cells (CD62L+ and CD44low
population) that were the majority (86.5% ± 2.4%; mean
± SEM) of total vaginal CD8+ T cells in unimmunized
OT-I mice (Fig. 5c, left plots and 5d), we checked the CD62L and CD44 expression
on the CD69 expressing CD8+ T cells in the vaginal mucosa of
both naïve and immunized animals (Fig.
5c right plots and 5e).
Figure 5
The local immune priming of endogenous CD8+ T cells that
naturally migrate into the physiologically intact vaginal mucosa
The phenotype of vaginal CD8+ T cells in the Ivag
SIINFEKL-immunized RAG-I KO, OT-I transgenic mice. This is representative of 2
independently repeated experiments (n=3) with the same results. (a
and b) The CD69 expression of CD8+ T cells in
vaginal mucosa and iliac LNs of naïve and immunized animals that were
sacrificed at 8 hours and 12 hours PI. (a) Gating strategy.
(b) The statistical difference (mean ± SEM) among
naïve and 2 immunized groups. The p value was generated using a one-way
ANOVA plus Tukey’s multiple comparison. (c) The gating
strategies for the phenotype assay of vaginal CD8+ T cells in
naïve and immunized animals at 8 hours after immunization. Left
plots, The percentage of CD62L+ and
CD44low cells out of total vaginal CD8+ T
cells. Middle left plots, The percentage of vaginal
CD8+ T cells. Middle right plots, The
percentage of CD69 expressing cells out of total vaginal CD8+
T cells. Right plots, The percentage of CD62L+
CD44low cells out of total CD69 expressing vaginal
CD8+ T cells. (d) The statistical difference
(mean ± SEM) of panel C, left plots. (e) The statistical
difference (mean ± SEM) of panel C, right plots. The p values were
generated using Student’s t test.
In the immunized animals at 8 hours post immunization, the percentage of
naïve cells among total vaginal CD8+ T cells dropped
down to 62.1% ± 1.2% (mean ± SEM), which was
significantly lower (p = 0.0009 by a student’s
t test) than that of unimmunized animals (Fig. 5c, left plots and 5d). More importantly, among the subset that expressed the CD69
activation marker, the percentage of CD44low and
CD62L+ cells out of total CD69 expressing
CD8+ T cells was 50.6% ± 1.4%
(mean ± SEM), which was significantly higher (p = 0.0012 by a
student’s t test) than that of naïve animals
(5.3% ± 5.3%; mean ± SEM) (Fig. 5c right plots and 5e). Therefore, the CD69 was expressed mostly by the vaginal
CD8+ T cells with the naïve phenotype
(CD62L+ and CD44low) that had not yet
downregulated CD62L or upregulated CD44 at 8 hrs after immunization, but not
CD8+ T cells with the memory phenotype
(CD62L− and CD44high). This shows that the
primed cells are derived from the naïve population and not the tiny
fraction of memory cells in the unimmunized mucosa. Taken together, this
experiment confirmed that the local immune priming can occur in the
naïve endogenous CD8+ T cells that naturally migrate
into the physiologically intact vaginal mucosa before any priming occurs in the
DLN.
DC-dependent activation of naïve T cells in vaginal tissue
To completely isolate vaginal mucosa from all the other tissue
compartments, we developed a vaginal tissue culture system (Fig. 6a). To detect the presence in the vaginal mucosa
of APCs that had taken up Ag after Ivag immunization and could prime
naïve T cells, we Ivag immunized mice with SIINFEKL peptide and resected
the vaginal tissue at day 1 PI (Fig. 6a).
The vaginal tissue was digested in medium containing collagenase and DNase
followed by CD8 depletion to remove any endogenous CD8+ T
cells primed either within the vaginal mucosa or in the DLNs followed by vaginal
homing (Fig. 6a). We co-cultured the
CD8-depleted vaginal tissue together with CFSE-labeled naïve OT-I
CD8+ T cells for 4 days without adding any Ag to the
culture (Fig. 6a) and tested Ag-specific
CD8+ T cell proliferation by measuring CFSE dilution of
the T cells cultured with the immunized vaginal tissue compared to those
cultured with unimmunized vaginal tissue. Being co-cultured with the immunized
vaginal tissue, naïve OT-I CD8+ T cells underwent
substantial proliferation as compared to those co-cultured with tissue from
unimmunized mice (Fig. 6b, c). Moreover, if
CD11c+ cells (including DCs) were depleted from the
immunized vaginal tissue, the proliferation of OT-I CD8+ T
cells was largely lost (Fig. 6b, c).
Similarly, the cultures containing both immunized vaginal tissue and
naïve OT-I CD8+ T cells showed significantly higher
levels of IFN-γ that was also dependent upon the presence of
CD11c+ cells that had taken up antigen during Ivag
immunization (Fig. 6d). Therefore, the
activation of naïve CD8+ T cells in the vaginal
tissue required local vaginal APCs that were able to take up Ag at the time of
Ivag immunization and then present it later to naïve
CD8+ T cells locally in the vaginal mucosa, without the
benefit of LNs (not present in these vaginal tissue preparations).
Figure 6
The naïve OT-I CD8+ T cells activated in
surgically resected vaginal tissue
(a) The experimental design. (b) The CFSE dilution of
naïve OT-I CD8+ T cells in each culture.
(c) The absolute number (mean ± SEM) of
CFSElow cells in each culture. (d) The IFN-γ
concentration (mean ± SEM) in the supernatant of each culture. This is
representative of 2 independently repeated experiments (n=3 per group of
culture containing the pool of 3 digested vaginal tissues) with the same
results. P values were generated using a one-way ANOVA plus Tukey’s
multiple comparison.
Local expansion of Ag-specific CD8 T cells in vaginal mucosa
We also asked whether the vaginal mucosa could support the local
expansion of Ag-specific CD8+ T cells. We characterized the
kinetics of CD8+ T cell immune responses by measuring the
tetramer positive CD8+ T cells at different time points after
Ivag immunization with rAd5-gp140 (Supplementary Fig. 5a). Day 7 was
the earliest time point at which we could detect Ag-specific
CD8+ T cells in both the vaginal mucosa and the draining
iliac LNs (Supplementary Fig.
5b). We therefore decided to block T cell egress from LNs by FTY720
treatment starting from day 5 PI (Fig. 7a).
The FTY720 treatment decreased blood Ag-specific CD8+ T cells
to a background level, similar to that in either naïve animals or the
immunized animals sacrificed at day 5 PI (Fig.
7b). In contrast, a similar amount of Ag-specific
CD8+ T cells were found in vaginal mucosa of
FTY720-treated as untreated immunized mice (Fig.
7c). To determine whether the rAd5-gp140 Ivag immunization could
induce the formation of IVALT similar to that seen in rAd5-SIINFEKL immunized
animals (Fig. 1d), we examined vaginal
tissue sections of immunized mice either with or without FTY720 treatment by IHC
(Fig. 7d). The formation of IVALT
containing CD3+, CD8+ and
CD11c+ cells was observed in the immunized animals either
treated or untreated with FTY720. Because the FTY720 treatment diminished the
number of Ag-specific CD8+ T cells to a background level in
the bloodstream (Fig. 7b), which is the
only pathway through which the primed T cells can enter the vaginal mucosa from
other tissue compartments, we concluded that the quantity of vaginal Ag-specific
immune CD8+ T cells as well as the capability of IVALT
formation did not depend upon blood replenishment.
Figure 7
Local formation of Ag-specific IVALT in the vaginal mucosa of Ivag immunized
WT mice
(a to c) The absolute number of Ag-specific CD8+
T cells in blood and vaginal mucosa of naïve and immunized mice either
with or without FTY720 treatment. ○, naïve mice euthanized at
day 10 PI (n=12); □, immunized mice euthanized at day 5 PI
(n=12); △, FTY720 treated immunized mice euthanized at day 10 PI
(n=12); ▲, immunized mice euthanized at day 10 PI
(n=18). This is the pool of 3 independently repeated experiments with
the same results. (a) The experimental design. (b) The
absolute number (mean ± SEM) of Ag-specific CD8+ T
cell in blood. (c) The absolute number (mean ± SEM) of
Ag-specific CD8+ T cell in vaginal mucosa. The p values were
generated using one-way ANOVA plus Tukey’s multiple comparison.
(d) Representative IHC staining showing the formation of immune
cell clusters containing CD3+, CD8+ and
CD11c+ cells in immunized mice either with or without
FTY720 treatment. Scale bar: 100 μm in 40X photomicrographs; 400
μm in 10X photomicrographs.
To identify the proliferating Ag-specific CD8+ T
cells within the vaginal mucosa, we treated the immunized mice from day
5–9 with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), a synthetic thymidine analogue that
can be incorporated into newly synthesized DNA during cell proliferation (Fig. 8a). At day 10 PI, the amount of
BrdU+ Ag-specific CD8+ T cells in the
vaginal mucosa was similar in both FTY720-treated and untreated immunized groups
(Fig. 8b), independent of trafficking
from LNs. In contrast, the FTY720 treatment caused a significant increase of
BrdU+ Ag-specific CD8+ T cells in the
iliac LNs due to blockage of T cell egress from DLNs (Fig. 8b). Thus, similar to what is found in the lung
[41], the type II
vaginal mucosa can support Ag-specific CD8+ T cell local
expansion that largely contributed to the quantity (the absolute number of
Ag-specific CD8+ T cells) and the quality (the formation of
IVALT) of vaginal Ag-specific CD8+ T immunity, independent of
systemic T cell recruitment.
Figure 8
The local proliferation of endogenous Ag-specific CD8+ T
cells in the vaginal mucosa of Ivag immunized WT mice with or without FTY720
treatment
The BrdU+ Ag-specific CD8+ T cells in
vaginal mucosa of FTY720 treated or untreated immunized mice. ○,
naïve mice (n=3); ●, BrdU-treated naïve mice
(n=3); □, immunized mice (n=5); ■, BrdU-treated
immunized mice (n=5); △, FTY720 and BrdU-treated immunized mice
(n=5). This is representative of 2 independently repeated experiments
with the same results. (a) The experimental design.
(b) The absolute number (mean ± SEM) of
BrdU+ Ag-specific CD8+ T cells in
vaginal mucosa and iliac LNs. The p values were generated using a one-way ANOVA
plus Tukey’s multiple comparison.
Discussion
In the present study, our results demonstrated for the first time that the
vaginal mucosa can support the Ag-specific immune priming of naïve T cells
and promote Ag-specific T cell local expansion, despite the absence of MALT or
secondary lymphoid tissues. Therefore, in addition to the known role of DLNs, the
type-II vaginal mucosa can also act as an inductive site for the generation of
primary CD8+ T cell mucosal immune responses independent of the
DLNs, contrary to accepted belief.The priming of immune responses in type-II mucosa is thought to occur only
in secondary lymphoid tissues, such as DLNs where the APC primed naïve T
cells can become memory T cells and traffic back to the mucosal sites. However, in
direct contrast to this existing widely believed paradigm, we have shown vaginal
Ag-specific CD8+ T cell immune responses are possible following
primary Ivag vaccination in mice lacking DLNs (Fig
1). In agreement with our finding is a recent study by Roth et al. who
reported the induction of HSV-specific immune responses in the vagina of LN
deficient LTα KO mice [13].
Further, the priming of CD8+ T cells in the absence of LN
involvement has been reported in the lungs (in type I mucosa)[1-3] and other non-lymphoid organs, such as the liver [30,31]. Indeed in our study we also show the induction of
CD8+ T cell priming in the liver (Fig. 3g and h). Moyron-Quiroz et al. showed that the
induction of CD8+ T cells in the lungs without LN involvement may occur in
induced bronchial-associated lymphoid tissues (iBALT) in type I mucosa[1,2]. Likewise, in this study we demonstrate by IHC the formation of
IVALT in the vaginal mucosa following primary IVag vaccination. Similar induction of
IVALT has been reported in hormone treated, TK− HSV-vaccinated
mice that are challenged with wild-type HSV [15]. Despite previous studies showing immune protection in the
mice without LNs [1–3, 13]
and the presence of IVALT [15], none
of those studies were able to definitively demonstrate the primary immune inductive
site because they did not exclude the possibilities that the immune priming can
occur in other non-lymphoid organs, such as liver and traffic to the vagina. By
using the dual transfer model to exclude trafficking from these or any other sites
through the bloodstream, we have now been able to definitively demonstrate that the
vaginal type-II mucosa acts as an inductive site for primary CD8+
T cell immunity. Therefore, our results demonstrated a new paradigm of
IVALT-associated local primary immune induction in type II mucosa (that lacks
structured lymphoid tissues), which is totally independent of any structured
lymphoid and/or even non-lymphoid tissues outside vaginal mucosa.These results also demonstrate the ability to induce local vaginal immunity
more rapidly than could occur if time were required for DCs to carry antigen to the
DLNs and then for T cells to migrate back through the blood to the mucosa. As we
have seen in the dual transfer studies, the latter pathway requires additional time
(Fig. 3e vs Fig. 4d). This was confirmed in the kinetic study in unmanipulated mice
(Fig. 5a and b). This kinetic difference
has important implications for vaccine delivery strategies aimed at acute protective
immunity.Since the number of endogenous naïve T cells specific to any one
peptide-MHC complex is extremely small (20–200/mouse) [42], it is almost impossible to detect a
reliable population of Ag-specific T cells before clonal expansion, after which the
Ag-specific T cells are not naïve anymore. To test our hypothesis, we
characterized vaginal local immune priming of naïve CD8+
T cells by the Ag-specific activation of CD44-depleted
Rag−/− OT-1 CD8+ T cells
[43] isolated from the
spleen of naïve animals (Fig. 3a),
because OT-1 or similar TCR transgenic T cells are the only source of naïve
CD8+ T cells of a homogeneous Ag specificity. The adoptively
transferred OT-1 CD8+ cells have been widely used and accepted as
naïve Ag-specific T cells by many experienced labs, in which the
investigators published their studies using the transferred cells from unimmunized
transgenic mice as naïve [44-53], often
even without further purification for CD62Lhigh and CD44low
cells. In the current study, we depleted all the CD62Llow and
CD44high cells right before the adoptive transfer and brought the
purity of our transferred naïve CD8+ T cells up to 98.5%
(Fig. 3a). Using the dual transfer model
providing a large amount of naïve T cells at the local site, we could detect
early immune priming at 24 hours PI, which is too short for the primed endogenous
naïve T cell to reach a detectable level, most likely through clonal
expansion. The rapid detection of response by TCR transgenic T cells due to the
greater numbers of antigen-specific cells without an expansion phase is therefore
critical to carry out such studies, but does not bear on their naïve
status.We, like many other investigators studying vaginal mucosal immunology
[12, 13, 15, 21, 22, 26, 54], treated all the experimental animals with
Depo-Provera, a long-acting progesterone, because vaginal Ag-specific
CD8+ T cell immunity could not be consistently induced in
animals without Depo-Provera treatment. In contrast to humans, the mouse passes
through 4 estrous stages during an estrous cycle that lasts only 4 days and then
repeats: proestrus, estrus, metestrus and diestrus [55]. Among the 4 stages, more
CD8+ T cells have been found present in vaginal mucosa during
diestrus [56]. Although the detailed
mechanisms of Depo-provera effects on vaginal mucosal immunity remain to be clearly
determined, the use of Depo-provera, the dominant hormone in diestrus, has been
shown to affect the thickness of vaginal epithelium [22], the forming of IVALT [15, 54]
and the accumulation of CD11c+ cells [22]. We think the use of Depo-provera, through
the regulation of multiple immune parameters, may make the vaginal mucosa more
suitable to our Ivag immunization. Without such synchronization of mice that
otherwise undergo rapid cyclic changes, it is impossible to carry out controlled
studies of vaginal immunity.It is well accepted that T cell-mediated local protective immunity can play
an important role to control the viral infection in peripheral tissue compartments
[11, 24–26]. In addition to the cytotoxic effects based on direct
cell-to-cell contact, the tissue-resident T memory cells (TRM) have been
recently found to undergo local development in skin [57] and possess more protective immune functions
including the triggering of tissue-wide innate and adaptive immune responses
[58, 59]. Therefore, a goal should be a more
efficient vaccine strategy, which can generate strong local T cell-mediated immune
responses [60] without widespread
systemic immune activation that facilitates the replication of some viruses, such as
HIV and SIV [61, 62]. Because the DLNs are not required to induce
vaginal immunity, it may be possible to induce local immunity without systemic
immune activation.Our study outlines definitive evidence for the induction of primary immune
induction in vaginal type-II mucosa, thereby identifying a new pathway of
vaccine-induced mucosal immunity and a new rationale for the design of future
mucosal vaccine strategies.
Methods
Mice
Because this was a study of vaginal immunity, all mice used in the
current study were females from 16–20 weeks of age.
BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice were purchased
from NCI animal facility (Frederick, MD). OT-1, LTα KO and CXCR5 KO mice
(all with C57BL/6 background) were purchased from Jackson
Laboratories (Bar Harbor, ME). All experimental protocols were approved by and
carried out under the guidelines of the NCI’s Animal Care and Use
Committee. All the animals were grouped randomly and the number of animals in
each group is equal to or greater than 3 (n ≥ 3). All the experiments
were repeated at least 2 (2 to 4) times.
Reagents and inocula
Replication deficient adenovirus 5 expressing HIVgp140 (rAd5-gp140) was
developed and kindly provided by Dr. Gary Nabel (Vaccine Research Center, NIAID,
Bethesda MD). Replication deficient adenovirus 5 expressing SIINFEKL
(rAd5-SIINFEKL) was first developed by Dr. S. E. Hensley in Jon
Yewdell’s and Jack Bennink’s laboratory (NIAID) and kindly
provided by Dr. Robert Seder in (NIAID). The FTY720 was purchased from Cayman
Chemical (Ann Arbor, MI). The SIINFEKL peptide was purchased from Polypeptide
Laboratory (San Diego, CA). The mutant E. coli labile toxin
(mLT) was a kind gift of Dr. John Clements (Tulane University, New Orleans). The
DOTAP and bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) were purchased from SIGMA (St. Louis, MO).
The Depo-provera was purchased from the Department of Veterinary Medicine,
NIH.
Intravascular T cell staining
Alexa fluor-647 labeled anti-mouseThy1.2 antibody was diluted in PBS at
250 ng ml−1. Each mouse was injected with 100 μl of
diluted antibody through the tail vein. All the animals were sacrificed at 1
minute post IV injection, a time point at which all the blood T cells in
retro-orbital sinus were Thy1.2 positive.
Dual transfer
The CD8+ T cells were isolated from
Rag−/− OT-1 TCR transgenic mice using a CD8
isolation kit (Miltenyi Biotec, Auburn, CA). The CD44+ cells
were depleted using biotinylated anti-mouseCD44 (1:2000 dilution, BioLegend,
San Diego, CA) and anti-biotin beads (Miltenyi Biotec). The naïve
CD8+ OT-1 T cells were labeled with either CFSE or violet
dye (both from Invitrogen, Grand Island, NY) at 5 μM. Ten microliters of
CFSE-labeled cells (1×108 ml−1) were
directly injected into the vaginal tissue (Ivag) using a Hamilton syringe with a
32G needle. One hundred microliters of violet dye-labeled cells
(1×107 ml−1) were injected into the
tail vein (IV). The mice were under isoflurane general anesthesia during the
performance of dual transfer.
Immunization
All the immunizations in this study were performed intravaginally
(Ivag). The dose of each inoculum was: 2×107 PFU of
rAd5-gp140, 1×107 of rAd5-SIINFEKL or 40 μg of
SIINFEKL peptide plus 5 μg of mutant E. coli labile
toxin (mLT) and equal volume of DOTAP. Ivag immunizations were performed using a
20 μl pipette tip to apply the inoculum into the vaginal canal
atraumatically. All the immunized mice were maintained under inhalation
anesthesia for 20 minutes.
Vaginal tissue culture
The resected vaginal tissue was digested in RPMI 1640 medium (GIBCO,
Grand Island, NY) containing collagenase-D (400 unit ml−1,
Roche Indianapolis, IN), DNase-I (2.5mg ml−1, Roch),
Pen-Strep (100 μg ml−1, GIBCO), HEPES buffer (20 mM,
GIBCO) and fetal bovine serum (10%, GIBCO). The digestion lasted for 20
minutes with stirring. The vaginal tissue was then smashed through a 70
μm cell strainer (Fisher, Pittsburgh, PA) followed by CD8 depletion
using Dynal Beads (Life Technologies). The CD8-depleted vaginal tissue, either
with or without CD11c-depletion (CD11c kit, Miltenyi Biotec), was co-cultured
with 1×106 CFSE (Invitrogen) labeled naïve OT-1
CD8+ T cells in RPMI medium containing Pen-Strep (100
μg ml−1, GIBCO), HEPES buffer (10mM, GIBCO),
L-glutamine (2 mM, GIBCO), gentamicin (50mg ml−1, SIGMA), MEM
non-essential amino acid (GIBCO), sodium pyruvate (1mM, GIBCO),
2-mercaptoethanol (10 μM, SIGMA), fungizone (2.5 μg
ml−1, GIBCO) and fetal bovine serum (20%,
GIBCO).
Antibodies and Flow cytometry
Anti-mouseCD3, CD8, CD69, CD44, CD25 and CD62L were purchased from
Biolegend and used to stain the cells at the concentration of 150ng
ml−1. Data were collected using a LSRII using DIVA
software (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA) or a FACSCalibur flow cytometer using
CellQuest software (BD Biosciences). The analysis of data was performed using
FlowJo (Tree Star, Ashland, OR).
Depo-Provera synchronization
All the mice in our study received Depo-Provera at a dose of 3 mg/mouse
through subcutaneous injection 5 days before each experiment.
FTY720 treatments
FTY720 was given by IP injection at an initial dose of 50
μg/mouse followed by daily maintenance injection at a dose of 5
μg/mouse.
Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) treatment and staining
The BrdU (1mg/mouse, SIGMA) was given by daily intraperitoneal (IP)
injections for 5 days. The staining of BrdU positive cells was performed using a
Brdu staining kit (BD Biosciences) according to the manufacturer’s
instructions.
Immunohistochemistry (IHC)
The vagina was embedded in OCT and snap frozen in liquid nitrogen
pre-cooled isopentane. Frozen vaginal tissue blocks were cut into sections with
the thickness of 5 μm, stored in −70°C until use.
Cryostat sections were fixed in acetone for 5 min, rehydrated in PBS, and
incubated overnight with primary antibodies including rabbit anti-CD3 (1:100
dilution, AbCam), rat anti-CD8 (1:200 dilution, Biolegend) and hamster
anti-CD11c (1:150 dilution, Biolegend). The primary antibodies were washed out 3
times by PBS followed by the addition of HRP conjugated secondary antibodies
(Vector Lab) including horse anti-rabbit IgG, goat anti-rat IgG and goat
anti-hamster IgG. The secondary antibodies were incubated in room temperature
for 30 minutes followed by DAB (kit from Vector Lab) development and hematoxylin
(BBC Biochemical) counter staining.
Statistics
The statistics of this study was performed using Prism software. One-way
ANOVA plus Tukey’s multiple comparison was used to compare multiple
groups; Student’s t test was used to compare 2
groups.
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