| Literature DB >> 26904022 |
Abstract
Influenza A virus (IAV) is a significant human pathogen causing annual epidemics and periodic pandemics. CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated immunity contributes to the clearance of virus-infected cells, and CTL immunity targeting the conserved internal proteins of IAVs is a key protection mechanism when neutralizing antibodies are absent during heterosubtypic IAV infection. However, CTL infiltration into the airways, its cytotoxicity, and the effects of produced proinflammatory cytokines can cause severe lung tissue injury, thereby contributing to immunopathology. Studies have discovered complicated and exquisite stimulatory and inhibitory mechanisms that regulate CTL magnitude and effector activities during IAV infection. Here, we review the state of knowledge on the roles of IAV-specific CTLs in immune protection and immunopathology during IAV infection in animal models, highlighting the key findings of various requirements and constraints regulating the balance of immune protection and pathology involved in CTL immunity. We also discuss the evidence of cross-reactive CTL immunity as a positive correlate of cross-subtype protection during secondary IAV infection in both animal and human studies. We argue that the effects of CTL immunity on protection and immunopathology depend on multiple layers of host and viral factors, including complex host mechanisms to regulate CTL magnitude and effector activity, the pathogenic nature of the IAV, the innate response milieu, and the host historical immune context of influenza infection. Future efforts are needed to further understand these key host and viral factors, especially to differentiate those that constrain optimally effective CTL antiviral immunity from those necessary to restrain CTL-mediated non-specific immunopathology in the various contexts of IAV infection, in order to develop better vaccination and therapeutic strategies for modifying protective CTL immunity.Entities:
Keywords: CD8+ T cells; human; immune regulation; immunopathology; influenza; vaccination
Year: 2016 PMID: 26904022 PMCID: PMC4742794 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Regulation of CTL magnitude and effector activity. Right: CTL effector mechanisms against IAV in the infected lung or airway: the IAV-specific CTL targets IAV-infected airway epithelial cells by recognizing a viral peptide presented by MHCI molecules on the surface of infected cells; the CTL then induces cell death in the targeted cell through perforin/granzyme, FasL/Fas, and/or TRAIL/TRAIL-DR signaling; CTLs also can produce IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-2, CCL3, CCL4, and other cytokines and chemokines to further enhance inflammation and immune activation in the infected lung. Left: various regulatory mechanisms to control the magnitude or effector activity of CTLs though costimulatory (upper) or coinhibitory (lower) signals provided in the lung-draining LNs or the infected lung. An optimal magnitude of protective CTL responses is achieved by balancing the costimulatory and coinhibitory signals, and dysregulation or imbalance among those signals can result in insufficient or exuberant CTL responses, leading to inefficient viral control or damaging immunopathology.
Overview of studies demonstrating immune protection by the CD8.
| Experimental model | IAV subtype/infection type/pathogenicity | Disease outcome after IAV infection | Measured CD8+ T-cell properties | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effector mediator | Antigen specificity | |||||
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-primed lymphocytes into naive mice | A/WSN(H1N1); lethal dose | Lower lung virus titers in recipient vs. non-recipient mice | IAV-specific cytotoxicity | Homologous IAV-primed effector lymphocytes | T cells are protective | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-primed lymphocytes into naive BALB/c mice or naive nude mice | Mouse-adapted A/Port Chalmers/l/73 (H3N2, MRC-9); lethal infection | Lower lung virus titer and greater recovery in recipient vs. non-recipient mice, but no significant protection against lethal infection | IAV-specific cytotoxicity | Homologous IAV-primed effector lymphocytes | T cells are protective | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific CD8+ T-cell clones into naive mice | X31(H3N2) and A/JAP/305/57(H2N2) for non-lethal infection; A/PR/8/34(HINI) for lethal infection | Lower lung virus titer after non-lethal infection; complete survival after lethal infection in recipient vs. non-recipient mice | IAV-specific cytotoxicity | Kd-restricted, NP-specific BALB/c clones T9/13 and BA4; Db-restricted, NP-specific C57BL clones B4 and B8 | IAV-specific CD8+ T cells are protective | ( |
| Wt and B2-M-deficient mice | A/Port Chalmers/1/73 (H3N2) for non-lethal infection; A/PR/8/34(H1N1) for lethal infection | Later virus clearance after non-lethal infection and greater mortality after lethal infection in B2-M-deficient vs. heterozygous mice, but virus could be cleared in the B2-M-deficient mice | IAV-specific cytotoxicity | Not described | IAV-specific CD8+ T cells are protective | ( |
| Fas-deficient mice; chimeric mice with T lymphocytes with/without perforin deficiency into mice with/without perforin deficiency | X31(H3N2) infection | Higher lung virus titer and later virus clearance in Fas-deficient mice; perforin-deficient CD8+ T cells resulted in later virus clearance in wt mice but uncontrolled virus titer in Fas-deficient mice | Not described | Not described | CTLs clear IAVs via perforin- and/or Fas-dependent processes | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific, | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) for lethal infection | Tc1 effectors but not Tc2 effectors reduced lung virus titer during early infection; Tc1 effectors conferred higher survival protection than Tc2 effectors against lethal infection | Tc1 and Tc2 were equally cytotoxic but produced different cytokines and chemokines; localized in the lung differently | Kd-restricted, HA-specific CD8+ T cells from a BALB/c clone 4 TCR transgenic mice; | Tc1 is more protective than Tc2 effectors | ( |
| Same as above, Tc1 and Tc2 mice with/without IFN-γ deficiency were compared | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) for lethal infection | IFN-γ-deficient Tc1 cells were equally effective in viral control; IFN-γ-deficient Tc2 cells were effective in viral control but showed the severest impairment of lung function | Same as described above | Same as above but with/without IFN-γ deficiency | Tc2 but not Tc1 depends on IFN-γ for its protective role | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of | OT-I antigen-bearing A/PR/8/34(H1N1) for lethal infection | Tc17 and Tc1 provided equivalent survival protection against lethal infection; IFN-γ-deficient or FasL-deficient Tc17 cells were less protective, and perforin-deficient Tc1 cells were not protective | Tc17 primarily produced IL-17 and some IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-2; negative for granzyme B, perforin, and cytotoxicity | OT-I CD8+ T cells were | Tc17 depends on IFN-γ and FasL; Tc1 depends on perforin for cytotoxicity and protective efficacy | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and TRAIL-deficient mice; adoptive transfer of CD8+ T cells with/without TRAIL deficiency into infected wt mice; antibody blockage of TRAIL signaling in IAV-infected wt mice | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) for lethal infection | Greater morbidity and virus load in TRAIL-deficient vs. wt mice; transfer of TRAIL-deficient CTLs into infected mice provided less survival protection than wt CTLs; delayed virus clearance after antibody blockade of TRAIL signaling | Lower CTL cytotoxicity in TRAIL-deficient vs. wt mice | Similar magnitude of IAV-specific CTLs in wt and TRAIL-deficient mice | CTLs utilize TRAIL-mediated cytotoxicity to control IAV infection | ( |
wt, wild type.
Overview of studies demonstrating immunopathology caused by CD8.
| Experimental model | IAV subtype/infection type/pathogenicity | Disease outcome after IAV infection | Measured CD8+ T-cell properties | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency/number | Effector mediator | |||||
| Intranasal infection of BALB/c and athymic nude mice | Mouse-adapted A/Port Chalmers/l/73 (H3N2, MRC-9) causing lethal infection | Longer survival and slower progression of lung pathology, but eventually lower survival rate, persistent lung injury, and higher lung virus titers in nude vs. wt mice | Fewer and later lymphocytic lung infiltrates in nude mice | Nude mouse lymphocytes were non-cytotoxic and functional | T cells provided protective immunity but also contributed to immunopathology | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CD8+ T cells into mice expressing an IAV HA antigen in alveolar epithelial cells | Non-viral infection model | Progressive weight loss and interstitial pneumonitis, compromised lung structure and function, inflammatory cytokine production leading to lethal lung injury in recipient mice | Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CTLs | Cytotoxicity of HA-specific CTLs, activation of target alveolar cells to produce MCP-1 cytokines | IAV-specific CTLs can cause severe lung injury after antigen recognition in the lung | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CD8+ T cells with/without perforin deficiency into mice expressing an HA antigen in alveolar epithelial cells; antibody blockage of TNF-α signaling | Non-viral infection model | Cell death and lung injury induced by perforin-deficient HA-specific CD8+ T cells in recipient mice depended on TNF-α not on Fas signaling; blockage of TNF-α signaling prevented lung injury | Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CTLs | TNF-α-mediated apoptosis in bystander alveolar epithelial cells in the absence of perforin | TNF-α released by CTLs can cause severe lung injury by inducing non-specific apoptosis of alveolar epithelial cells | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CD8+ T cells with/without IFN-γ deficiency into mice expressing an HA antigen in alveolar epithelial cells | Non-viral infection model | More severe lung injury after transfer of IFN-γ-producing vs. IFNF-γ-deficient HA-specific CTLs; exacerbated lung injury in State1-deficient recipients after transfer of IFN-γ-producing HA-specific CTLs | Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CTLs | IFN-γ released by IAV-specific CTLs | IFN-γ production of IAV-specific CD8+ T cells contributes to lung immunopathology and subsequent IFN-γ signaling of host cells regulates its inflammatory effects | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CD8+ T cells with/without TNF-α deficiency into mice expressing an HA antigen in alveolar epithelial cells | Non-viral infection model | More severe lung injury, morbidity, and mortality after transfer of TNF-α-producing vs. TNF-α-deficient IAV-specific CTLs; TNF-α/TNFR1 signaling activated target alveolar cells to express inflammatory cytokines MCP-1 and MIP-2 | Adoptive transfer of HA-specific CTLs | TNF-α released by IAV-specific cells and TNF-α signaling-induced inflammatory cytokines | Soluble TNF-α released by IAV-specific CD8+ T cells and TNF-α signaling induce inflammatory cytokine production and contribute to immunopathology | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific CD8+ T cells into (1) wt mice or mice expressing a TNF-α signaling inhibitor, adenovirus-14.7K protein, and (2) mice expressing an IAV antigen ± expression of inhibitor | (1) A/PR/8/34(H1N1) infection and (2) non-viral infection model | (1) Less reduction of lung oxygen transfer in mice expressing TNF-α inhibitor than in wt mice, but delayed virus clearance and (2) less weight loss and lung injury in recipient mice expressing IAV antigen with TNF-α inhibitor | Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific CTLs | TNF-α released by IAV-specific CTLs | TNF-α released by CTLs and TNF-α signaling-mediated inflammation facilitate virus clearance but also cause lung injury and compromise lung function, contributing to immunopathology | ( |
| Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific CD8+ T cells into wt or TNF-R2-deficient IAV-infected mice | A/Japan/57(H2N2) for lethal infection | Lethal infection in wt mice receiving no cells; complete survival protection in wt and TNFR2 mice receiving cells, but significant weight loss only in wt mice; no difference in virus control in mice receiving cells | Adoptive transfer of IAV-specific CTLs | TNF-α released by IAV-specific CTLs | IAV-specific CD8+ T cells protect mice from lethal infection but TNFR2 signaling of host cells mediates inflammation and contributes to immunopathology | ( |
Tight regulation of CD8.
| Experimental model | IAV subtype/infection type/pathogenicity | Disease outcome after IAV infection | Measured CD8+ T-cell properties | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency/number | Effector mediator | |||||
| Wt and CTLA4Ig transgenic mice in which CD28 signaling on CD8+ T cells is blocked were infected with IAVs in the absence of CD4+ T cells | Mem/71(H3N1) infection | Virus clearance was significantly lower in CTLA4Ig transgenic than wt mice | Diminished proliferating IAV-specific CD8+ T cells in transgenic mice | Not described | CD28 costimulation is crucial to mount efficient IAV-specific CTLs for efficient virus clearance | ( |
| IAV infection of wt, CD40L-, CD4-, or CD8-deficient mice treated with a NP-CD40L fusion protein (rAD-SNP40L) | A/PR/8/34(H1N1), lethal infection | rAD-SNP40L treatment significantly protected wt and CD40L- or CD4-deficient mice but not CD8-deficient mice from otherwise lethal infection, with reduced lung virus titer | Increased NP-specific CTLs and polyfunctional CD8+ T cells, along with increased NP-specific antibodies responses after treatment | NP-specific CTLs producing multiple cytokines | CD8+ T cells are crucial for rAD-SNP40L-mediated protection against infection | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and IL-7Ra449F-mutant mice | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) infection | More severe weight loss and failure to control lung virus titer in mutant mice vs. wt mice | Significant reduction of IAV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T responses after IAV infection in mutant mice | Not described | IL-7 signaling is necessary for robust IAV-specific T-cell response needed for efficient virus clearance | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and IL-12- or IL-18-deficient mice | X31(H3N2) infection | Delayed virus clearance from lung in IL-18-deficient mice vs. wt mice | Normal magnitudes of IAV-specific CTL responses in all groups after infection | Significantly reduced production of IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-2 by IAV-specific CTLs in the IL-18-deficient mice vs. wt mice | IL-18 induces optimal cytokine production by IAV-specific CTLs, which is necessary for the efficient virus clearance | ( |
| Intranasal antibody blockade of PD-L1 signaling during secondary IAV infection | PR/8 challenge in X31-primed mice | Reduced weight loss and virus load in anti-PD-L1-treated mice vs. untreated mice | Increased number of IAV-specific CD8+ T cell in the lung in treated mice | Increased levels of granzyme B and IFN-γ production in the airway | Local PD-L1 blockade in airways enhances IAV CTL immunity, promoting virus clearance and recovery | ( |
| Intraperitoneal antibody blockade of PD-L1 signaling after infection with low- and high-pathogenic IAVs | X31 and PR/8 as low- and high-pathogenic virus for sublethal and lethal infections, respectively | Anti-PD-L1 treatment reduced lung virus titer only at late infection stage and only in PR/8 infection; no effect on illness or survival | Antibody treatment significantly increased IAV-specific CD8+ T cells only in PR/8-infected mice | No effects on CD8+ T-cell functionality | Systematic PD-L1 blockade may enhance CTL protection in high-pathogenic IAV infection | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and Gal-9-deficient mice; blockade of Tim-3 signaling via a Tim-3 fusion protein (Tim-3Ig) after IAV infection | X31(H3N2) infection | Gal-9-deficient mice had faster virus clearance vs. wt mice; Tim-3 blockade in wt mice resulted in increased virus control | Enhanced IAV-specific CD8+, CD4 T cell and antibody responses in Gal9-deficient mice; Tim-3 blockade increased IAV-specific CTL number in the airway | Not described | Gal-9/Tim-3 signaling constrains protective IAV-specific CTL immunity | ( |
| IAV infection in wt and 4-1BBL-deficient mice | X31 for sublethal infection; PR/8 or PR/8-OVA for lethal infection | 4-1BBL deficiency had no effect on disease severity after X31 infection, but resulted lower survival, higher virus titer, and reduced lung function after PR/8 infection vs. wt mice | Reduced IAV-specific CTLs in the lung of 4-1BBL-deficient mice only after PR/8 infection | Not described | 4-1BB stimulatory signaling is induced to control IAV-specific CTL magnitude to be commensurate with IAV infection severity | ( |
Dysregulation of CD8.
| Experimental model | IAV subtype/infection type/pathogenicity | Disease outcome after IAV infection | Measured CD8+ T-cell properties | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency/number | Effector mediator | |||||
| Administration of OX40 fusion proteins to IAV-infected mice | X31(H3N2) infection | Less weight loss, lower illness score, and no change in virus clearance in treated mice vs. untreated mice | Reduced total number of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and reduced number of IAV-specific CD8+ T cells in treated mice | Not described | Exuberant T-cell infiltration during IAV infection contributes to immunopathology | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and PD-1-deficient mice | X31(H3N2) infection | Delayed weight loss during early infection but slower recovery in PD-1-deficient mice vs. wt mice; no difference in lung function | Significantly increased number of IAV-specific CTLs in PD-1-deficient mice | Increased granzyme B and CD107a (degranulation) levels in IAV-specific, PD-1-deficient CTLs | PD-1-negative regulation of IAV CTL immunity may limit immunopathology and facilitate recovery | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and Qa-1b-deficient mice; antibody blockage of NKG2A signaling | A/Japan/57(H2N2) infection | Greater pulmonary pathology in the deficient mice vs. wt mice | Not described | Enhanced TNF-α production by IAV-specific CTLs | Excessive TNF-α production by CTLs causes immunopathology | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and NKG2A-deficient mice; adoptive transfer of CD8+ T cells with/without NKG2A deficiency to infected wt mice | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) infection | Enhanced lung injury in the NKG2A-deficient mice vs. wt mice; greater inflammation and alveolar hemorrhage after transfer of NKG2A-deficient CD8+ T cells | Slightly increased frequency of NP-specific CTLs in NKG2A-deficient mice | Increased production of TNF-α, IFN-γ, and IL-2 by IAV-specific CTLs in NKG2A-deficient mice | Excessive inflammatory cytokine production by CTLs causes immunopathology | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and inmemTNFD1–9(K11E KI) mice (in which membrane-bound TNF-α cannot be cleaved into soluble form) and TNFR1-deficient mice; depletion of CD8+ T cells in TNF-α-deficient mice | Non-lethal A/PR/8/34(H1N1) infection | Greater weight loss, lung injury, and lung function compromise in both mutant mice vs. wt mice; depletion of CD8+ T cells in TNF-α-deficient mice attenuated lung injury | Increased number of IAV-specific CTLs and of total CD4+ T cells in both mutant mice vs. wt mice | TNF-α signaling via TNFR1 on CD8+ T cells | TNFR1 signaling on CD8+ T cells limits its response magnitude and the reduce CTL-mediated lung injury | ( |
| IAV infection of wt and TRAIL-deficient mice | A/PR/8/34(H1N1) infection | Greater morbidity, mortality, and pulmonary pathology but no change in virus clearance in TRAIL-deficient mice vs. wt mice | Increased number of IAV-specific CTLs in the lungs of TRAIL-deficient mice due to less apoptosis and greater proliferation | Not described | TRAIL constrains excessive magnitude of IAV CTL response to prevent immunopathology | ( |
Overview of animal studies showing that IAV-specific CD8.
| Experimental model | Disease outcome after second IAV infection | Measured CD8+ T-cell properties | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First IAV infection (priming) | Second IAV infection (challenge) | Frequency/number in second responses | CTL cross-reactivity | |||
| Udorn(H3N2) by IV, IP, or IN routes | 4 weeks later, A/PR/8/34(H1N1) lethal infection | 20% survival in primed mice | Increased heterosubtypic CTL effectors in primed mice | Heterosubtypic CTL cytotoxicity detected during memory and second responses | CTLs are associated with heterosubtypic immunity | ( |
| A/Quail/HK/G1/97(H9N2) by IN route | 4 weeks later, A/HK/156/97(H5N1) lethal infection | Complete survival with less weight loss in primed mice | Not described | Heterosubtypic CTL cytotoxicity detected during memory response | CTLs are associated with heterosubtypic protection | ( |
| X31(H3N2) by IN route | 4 weeks later, A/PR/8/34(H1N1) lethal infection | Accelerated virus clearance, reduced clinical signs, reduced lung lesions, and increased survival rate in primed mice | Significantly greater NP-specific CTL population in primed mice | Not described | Enhanced cross-reactive NP-specific CTL response is associated with protection | ( |
| A/HongKong/2/68(H3N2) or a respiratory syncytial virus by IN route | 4 weeks later, A/Indonesia/5/05 (H5N1) lethal infection | Reduced clinical signs, weight loss, mortality, and lung virus replication in IAV-primed mice but not in RSV-primed mice | Greater expansion of cross-reactive NP-specific CTLs in primed mice | Cross-reactive NP-specific CTLs | Expanded cross-reactive NP-specific CTLs are associated with protection | ( |
| A/Kawasaki/173/01(H1N1) by a combination of routes (nasal, ocular, and tracheal) in rhesus macaques | 4 months later, A/California/04/09(pandemic H1N1) infection | Faster virus clearance in primed animals | Earlier detection and higher number of activated CD8+ T cells in blood and lung of primed animals | Cross-reactive IAV-specific IFN-γ producing T cells | Cross-reactive CD8+ T cells is involved in protection | ( |
| A/Chicken/Hong Kong/TP38/03(H9N2), A/Hong Kong/33982/09 (H9N2), A/California/4/09(H1N1), or A/PR/8/34(H1N1) by IN route | 10 weeks later, A/Anhui/01/13(H7N9) lethal infection | Lower morbidity and mortality, pulmonary virus load, and time to clearance in primed mice | Earlier and greater airway infiltration by IAV-specific CTLs in primed mice | IAV-specific CTLs targeting conserved or cross-reactive epitopes were detected during memory and second responses | Cross-reactive IAV-specific CTLs contribute to heterosubtypic protection and the magnitude of the IAV-specific CTL memory pool are the best predictors of protective efficacy | ( |
| A/PR/8/34(H1N1) by IN route | 5 weeks later, A/Anhui/01/13(H7N9) lethal infection | Lower lung virus titer, morbidity, and mortality in primed animals | Not described | Cross-reactive IAV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ cells detected during memory response | Cross-reactive T cells are associated with protection | ( |
IV, intravenous; IP, intraperitoneal; IN, intranasal.
Overview of human studies showing that cross-reactive CD8.
| Human IAV infection | Findings in CD8+ T cells and disease outcome after IAV infection | Conclusion about CD8+ T cells | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental infection with A/Munich/1/79(H1N1) IAV | Greater CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity in patient blood samples at day 2 after inoculation was a correlate of lower virus shedding, faster virus clearance, and lower disease symptom score | High CTL responses is positively associated with recovery from seasonal H1N1 IAV infection | ( |
| Natural infection with 2009 pandemic H1N1 IAV | Higher proportion of preexisting CD8+ T cells to conserved epitopes was observed in individuals who developed less severe illness | Preexisting CD8+ T cells specific for conserved IAV epitopes were a positive correlate of cross-protection against the severity of H1N1 IAV infection | ( |
| Natural infection with H7N9 IAV | Patients with shorter hospitalization had an early, prominent H7N9-specific CD8+ T-cell response, while those with longer hospitalization had delayed or no T-cell activity | A robust CD8+ T-cell memory response is positively associated with protection against H7N9 IAV infection | ( |