| Literature DB >> 29350807 |
James E Ussher1, Christian B Willberg2,3, Paul Klenerman2,3,4.
Abstract
Mucosal associated invariant T cells (MAIT cells) bear a T cell receptor (TCR) that specifically targets microbially derived metabolites. Functionally, they respond to bacteria and yeasts, which possess the riboflavin pathway, essential for production of such metabolites and which are presented on MR1. Viruses cannot generate these ligands, so a priori, they should not be recognized by MAIT cells and indeed this is true when considering recognition through the TCR. However, MAIT cells are distinctive in another respect, since they respond quite sensitively to non-TCR signals, especially in the form of inflammatory cytokines. Thus, a number of groups have shown that virus infection can be "sensed" by MAIT cells and a functional response invoked. Since MAIT cells are abundant in humans, especially in tissues such as the liver, the question has arisen as to whether this TCR-independent MAIT cell triggering by viruses plays any role in vivo. In this review, we will discuss the evidence for this phenomenon and some common features which emerge across different recent studies in this area.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990TLRzzm321990; MAIT cells; MR1; cytokines; virus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29350807 PMCID: PMC6055725 DOI: 10.1111/imcb.12008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunol Cell Biol ISSN: 0818-9641 Impact factor: 5.126
Figure 1Activation of MAIT cells in a TCR‐dependent versus TCR‐independent manner. The left‐hand side shows activation following bacterial stimulation in the case of a bacterial species which has the riboflavin operon active and can produce the ligand—these may be cytosolic or taken up into phagosomes in a professional antigen‐presenting cell. Recognition occurs via TCR through recognition of ligand‐MR1 complexes, accompanied by cell surface signals (such as CD28/CD80 interactions) and cytokines. The balance between MR1‐dependent and ‐independent signals may vary over time, even if ligand is produced. The right‐hand side shows the situation in response to viruses, where ligand is not present, but cytokines will be produced through triggering of toll‐like receptors (TLRs) or other pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) which also lead to inflammasome activation. The role of coreceptor stimulation in this setting is unknown. In both cases, granzyme B activation is seen, although whether this can lead to degranulation in the setting of virus infection is not known.
Figure 2A cartoon illustrating the activation of MAIT cells by viruses. Viruses signal via PRRs to stimulate the production of cytokines. Other signals may also be involved. The exact blend of cytokines involved and the kinetics of their release varies between individual viruses and also between different APCs. Cytokines may activate MAIT cells directly via their cytokine receptors (e.g. IL‐12 and IL‐18) or indirectly through stimulating the release of other cytokines (e.g. IL‐15). Cytokine‐activated MAIT cells may have antiviral functions (possibly including cytotoxicity, although that is yet to be demonstrated), enhance inflammation and proliferate. In chronic viral infections, cytokine‐activated MAIT cells may also undergo activation‐induced cell death.
Studies of human MAIT cells and viruses
| Author/Year | Virus | Finding | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Billerbeck/Kang | HCV | CD161++/Tc17 cells reduced in blood and in liver with increasing fibrosis . |
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| Cosgrove/Ussher | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in the blood in early and chronic HIV, possibly through depletion rather than compartmentalization. No restoration with ART. |
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| Leeansyah | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in chronic HIV—remaining cells highly activated and dysfunctional. |
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| Wong | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in blood in HIV and HIV/TB infection. Lower frequencies associated with both acute and chronic HIV. ART did not restore numbers. |
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| Greathead | HIV | MAIT cell recovery in tissue on ART. |
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| Fernandez | HIV | MAIT cell depletion early in HIV but retain function. |
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| Eberhard | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in blood and lymph node in HIV, independent of disease progression ‐ possibly due to over stimulation by microbial products and cytokines |
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| Saeidi | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in HIV and HIV/TB regardless of ART. Associated with increased PD1 and decreased CCR6 expression. |
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| Gaardbo | HIV | MAIT cell depletion and lack of recovery with ART. |
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| Ussher | HIV | MAIT cell depletion from blood confirmed using molecular probe for TCR. |
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| Leeansyah | HIV | MAIT cells from HIV+ patients exhibited abnormal T‐bet and Eomes expression patterns that correlated with the deficiency in cytotoxic capacity and cytokine production. Patient's plasma IL‐7 levels correlated with frequency and functionality. |
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| Vinton | SIV | MAIT cell systemic depletion in SIV model. |
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| Barathan | HCV | MAIT cell frequencies decreased, activation (HLA‐DR, CD38) and markers of exhaustion (PD‐1, TIM‐3, CTLA‐4) and senescence (CD57) increased in chronic HCV. |
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| Spaan | HIV, HCV | MAIT cell depletion in both HIV and HCV. CD38 levels highest in coinfected patients with acute HCV. Interferon (IFN)‐α therapy in chronic HCV infections led to further decline in MAIT cell numbers. Low numbers persisted even after successful treatment (both IFN‐ and non‐IFN‐based treatments). |
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| Eberhard | HIV, HCV | MAIT cell depletion in blood and in liver. |
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| Khaitan | HIV | MAIT cell depletion in children and recovery with age/ART; early treatment associated with the best recovery. |
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| Hengst | HCV | MAIT cell depletion and dysfunction in HCV. Remaining peripheral MAIT cells showed an activated phenotype (granzyme B+, HLA‐DR+, PD‐1+ and CD69+). Dysfunction continued even after viral clearance. |
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| van Wilgenburg/Scherwitzl | HCV, dengue, Influenza | MAIT cell frequencies increased in acute dengue, but reduced in influenza and HCV infections. No recovery in HCV even after successful treatment. In all infectious settings, MAIT cells displayed markers of activation (CD38, HLA‐DR, granzyme B), which decreased on resolution of infection. During dengue virus infection, CD38 expression increased over the course of infection, peaking at the day of defervescence; CD38 expression was higher on patients with more severe disease. Role for IFN‐α and IL‐15 in activating MAIT cells. |
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| Loh | Influenza | Reduced MAIT cells frequencies in patients’ hospitalized with fatal H7N9 infection. Influenza‐exposed monocytes were able to induce granzyme B and IFN‐γ expression by MAIT cells, which was IL‐18 dependent. |
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| Paquin‐Proulx | HTLV‐1 | MAIT cell depletion and functional impairment, but high expression of activation markers CD38 and HLA‐DR, in HTLV‐1 infection. |
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| Beudeker | HIV/HCV | MAIT cell depletion and dysfunction in relation to liver fibrosis. |
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| Freeman | HIV | MAIT cell depletion despite ART. |
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| Boeijen | HBV | MAIT cells not depleted from the periphery, but display activation markers that reduced with therapy. |
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| Yong | HBV | Decrease in polyfunctional MAIT cell frequencies, including IFN‐γ+ and IFN‐γ+ granzyme B+ cells, in HBV infection. |
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| Bolte | HCV | Intrahepatic MAIT cells frequencies were decreased during HCV infection, which was inversely correlated with liver inflammation. Intrahepatic MAIT cells during infection display an activated and cytotoxic phenotype. Treatment resulted in reduction in activation and increase frequency. |
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