| Literature DB >> 28167943 |
Jennifer A Juno1, David van Bockel2, Stephen J Kent3, Anthony D Kelleher4, John J Zaunders4, C Mee Ling Munier2.
Abstract
CD4 T cells with cytotoxic function were once thought to be an artifact due to long-term in vitro cultures but have in more recent years become accepted and reported in the literature in response to a number of viral infections. In this review, we focus on cytotoxic CD4 T cells in the context of human viral infections and in some infections that affect mice and non-human primates. We examine the effector mechanisms used by cytotoxic CD4 cells, the phenotypes that describe this population, and the transcription factors and pathways that lead to their induction following infection. We further consider the cells that are the predominant targets of this effector subset and describe the viral infections in which CD4 cytotoxic T lymphocytes have been shown to play a protective or pathologic role. Cytotoxic CD4 T cells are detected in the circulation at much higher levels than previously realized and are now recognized to have an important role in the immune response to viral infections.Entities:
Keywords: CD4; CMV; EBV; HIV; cytotoxic; granzyme; influenza; perforin
Year: 2017 PMID: 28167943 PMCID: PMC5253382 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Summary of known CD4 cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) phenotype and mechanism of cytolysis in human, non-human primate (NHP), and murine models.
| Model | Phenotype | Conditions | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy adults | Cell surface | CD11a/b+, CD27−, CD28− CD45RO+, CCR7− | Appay et al. ( | |
| Activation | CD38lo, CD69−, Bcl2++, Ki67− | Appay ( | ||
| Differentiation | CD57+, perforin, GzmB | Appay et al. ( | ||
| Effector | CD57+, FRCL6+, NKG2D+, perforin+ | Schreeder et al. ( | ||
| Senescence | NKG2D+ | Alonso-Arias et al. ( | ||
| Regulatory T cells (Tregs) | Human | GzmB+ | Efimova and Kelley ( | |
| Tregs | Murine | GzmA+, GzmB+, perforin+ | Czystowska et al. ( | |
| Infection/pathogen | ||||
| Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) | Human | GzmA+, perforin+, TIA-1/GMP-17+ | Appay et al. ( | |
| Acute HIV-1 | Human | CD38+++, CD57−, Bcl2lo, IFN-γ, Ki67+, TIA-1+ | Zaunders et al. ( | |
| Simian immunodeficiency virus | NHP | CD28+, CD45RA−, CD95+, CCR7−, GrzmB+ | von Gegerfelt et al. ( | |
| Cytomegalovirus (CMV) | Human | CD28−, CD27−, GzmB+, perforin+ | Therapy cessation | van Leeuwen et al. ( |
| CD27−, CD28−, perforin+ | Latent CMV | Appay et al. ( | ||
| CD244+, CCR5+, GzmA+ IFN-γ+, TIA-1+ | Latent CMV | Zaunders et al. ( | ||
| CD107a, GzmA+ GzmB+, IFN-γ+, MIP-1β+, perforin+, TNF+ | Latent CMV | Casazza et al. ( | ||
| CX3CR1+, Gransulysin+, GzmA/B/H+, IFN-γ+, perforin+, TNF+ | Pachnio et al. ( | |||
| CD28−, CX3CR1+, NKG2D+, perforin+ | Posttransplant | Shabir et al. ( | ||
| Acute CMV | Human | CD27−, CD28+, IFN-γ+, GrzmB+, TNF+ (acute) | Gamadia et al. ( | |
| Epstein–Barr virus | Human | Eomes+Tbet+ | Akhmetzyanova et al. ( | |
| Influenza | Human | Perforin+, GzmB+ | Vaccine phenotype (BMDC, αCD3, IFN-γ, IL-2), | Zhou and McElhaney ( |
| Influenza | Mouse | GzmB+ | (CpG stimulus) | Vogel and Brown ( |
| GzmB+ | (PR8) | Brown et al. ( | ||
| Perforin+, GzmB+ | Hua et al. ( | |||
| Vaccinia | Human | CD4+ CD8− Leu11− | Littaua et al. ( | |
| Demkowicz et al. ( | ||||
| IFN-γ+ TIA-1+ CD57− | Vaccine phenotype | Zaunders et al. ( | ||
| GrzmA, GrzmK, KLRB1/CD161, Rab27a, granulysin, TIA-1, perforin | Microarray analysis | Munier et al. ( | ||
| Ectromelia | Mouse | GzmB+ | Fang et al. ( | |
| Hepatitis | Human | Perforin+ | Hepatitis B virus | Aslan et al. ( |
| Perforin+ | Hepatitis C virus | Aslan et al. ( | ||
| Perforin++ | Hepatitis D virus | Aslan et al. ( | ||
| Dengue | Human | Perforin+ | Antigen-presenting cell targets | Gagnon et al. ( |
| Fas/FasL | HepG2 cells | Weiskopf et al. ( | ||
| CD45RA+ CCR6−, CCR7−, CCR4−, CXCR3−, CD8a+, CD107a+, Gzm+, Eomes+, CX3CR1+ | ||||
| Parvovirus | Human | CD57+, GzmB+, perforin+, IL-17+ | Kumar et al. ( | |
| Hantavirus | Human | GzmB+, perforin+, CD107a± | Ma et al. ( | |
| Human papillomavirus | Human | CD28− NKG2D+ (CD107a and CD161 negatively correlated with frequency) | Garcia-Chagollan et al. ( | |
Parentheses () indicate the conditions applied to each model, which has been linked to phenotype.
Figure 1Mechanisms of CD4 cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) generation. (1) Peptide stimulation in conjunction with IL-2 signaling induces CD4 CTL activity in vitro. (2) Interferon signaling or other inflammatory cytokine signals can synergize with or compensate for low IL-2 signaling to promote acquisition of cytolytic function. (3) The inclusion of a CxxC motif in flanking residues of the peptide antigen is thought to improve the strength of the immunological synapse and promote cytotoxicity. (4) Class I-restricted T cell-associated molecule-mediated intracellular signaling promotes Eomes expression and the acquisition of cytolytic activity.