| Literature DB >> 31143185 |
Mariah Hassert1, James D Brien1, Amelia K Pinto1.
Abstract
Most of the world is at risk of being infected with a flavivirus such as dengue virus, West Nile virus, yellow fever virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, tick-borne encephalitis virus, and Zika virus, significantly impacting millions of lives. Importantly, many of these genetically similar viruses co-circulate within the same geographic regions, making it likely for individuals living in areas of high flavivirus endemicity to be infected with multiple flaviviruses during their lifetime. Following a flavivirus infection, a robust virus-specific T cell response is generated and the memory recall of this response has been demonstrated to provide long-lasting immunity, protecting against reinfection with the same pathogen. However, multiple studies have shown that this flavivirus specific T cell response can be cross-reactive and active during heterologous flavivirus infection, leading to the question: How does immunity to one flavivirus shape immunity to the next, and how does this impact disease? It has been proposed that in some cases unfavorable disease outcomes may be caused by lower avidity cross-reactive memory T cells generated during a primary flavivirus infection that preferentially expand during a secondary heterologous infection and function sub optimally against the new pathogen. While in other cases, these cross-reactive cells still have the potential to facilitate cross-protection. In this review, we focus on cross-reactive T cell responses to flaviviruses and the concepts and consequences of T cell cross-reactivity, with particular emphasis linking data generated using murine models to our new understanding of disease outcomes following heterologous flavivirus infection.Entities:
Keywords: T cell cross-reactivity; Zika; dengue; flavivirus; heterologous immunity; original antigenic sin
Year: 2019 PMID: 31143185 PMCID: PMC6520664 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Flavivirus genome and proteins. The flavivirus genome consists of a single positive-stranded RNA molecule with a 5′ methylguanosine cap followed by an untranslated region (UTR), open reading frame (ORF) and a 3′ UTR with multiple variable stem loop structures. The genome is translated from a single ORF into a polyprotein that is proteolytically cleaved by both viral and host proteases. The genome codes for three structural proteins (capsid, membrane, and envelope) and seven non-structural proteins (NS1, NS2a, NS2b, NS3, NS4a, NS4b, and NS5). Theoretically, peptides of any of these structural or non-structural proteins have the potential to be targets of the virus-specific T cell response. Multiple flavivirus cross-reactive T cell epitopes with murine MHC restriction have been demonstrated in various murine models, the breadth of which are indicated by the triangles below the polyprotein. For detailed information on these identified cross-reactive epitopes see Table 2.
Flavivirus cross-reactive T cell epitopes with murine MHC restriction identified using various murine models, named in the same manner as the papers they were identified in.
| NS3298 | ARGYISTRVGM ARGYISTRVEM | DENV1/3 DENV2/4 | WT BALB/c | Kd | ( |
| NS4a249 | YSQVNPLTL YSQVNPTTL | DENV1/3 DENV2/4 | WT C57BL/6 | Db | ( |
| PrM20 | ISFATTLGV LLFKTEDGV | ZIKV DENV | Ifnar1−/− | Kb | ( |
| PrM44 | ATMSYECPM DTITYKCPL | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− | Kb | ( |
| E4 | IGVSNRDFV IGISNRDFV | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− | Db | ( |
| E7 | SNRDFVEGM SNRDFVEGV | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− | Kb | ( |
| NS3347 | PSVRNGNEI PSIKAGNDI | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− | Db | ( |
| NS518 | CAEAPNMKII ESEVPNLDII | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− | Db | ( |
| NS4b209 | GASSVWNATTAIGL GASAVWNSTTATGL | WNV JEV | C57BL/6 | Db | ( |
| NS1132 | TFVVDGPETKECPT TFVVDGPETKECPD | WNV JEV | C57BL/6 | IAb | ( |
| NS3563 | WCFDGPRTNTIL WCFDGPRTNAIL | WNV JEV | C57BL/6 | IAb | ( |
| E-pep1 | SIGKAVHQVF | JEV WNV DENV | BALB/c | IAd or IEd | ( |
Figure 2Consequences of T cell cross-reactivity during heterologous infection. During a primary infection, (for example with Virus B), a diverse T cell response may be generated against multiple Virus-B-specific epitopes (Red) possibly in addition to some cross-reactive epitopes (Purple); both of which will contract to some degree following viral clearance. However, if an infection with Virus B is preceded by Virus A, and the two viruses share responses to the same cross-reactive epitopes, an altered T cell immunodominance hierarchy may occur during the heterologous infection. In this case, at the point of infection with Virus B, cross-reactive memory T cells generated during infection with Virus A are already present at a higher frequency and lower activation threshold than naïve T cells specific for Virus A. This can lead to a preferential expansion of the cross-reactive T cells often at the expense of the virus specific ones, or “immunodomination.” During this process, memory cells specific to Virus A can even be lost from memory attrition, potentially impacting protection from future infections with Virus A. Sometimes, T cell cross-reactivity can occur in the absence of neutralizing antibody cross-reactivity, resulting in higher antigen loads than what would normally be present in a homologous boosted infection (Virus B followed by Virus B) which can lead to profound T cell activation of a higher magnitude. In the case of some flaviviruses cross-reactive antibody can even increase antigen load via ADE. The preferentially expanded, cross-reactive T cells can display different avidity compared to those that would have been generated during an infection with Virus A in the absence of prior heterologous exposure. During a primary infection with Virus A, the cross-reactive population would normally have a stronger avidity to the peptide variant of Virus A. However, during a heterologous infection, they have a stronger avidity to the peptide variant of the prior infection, Virus B. T cell cross-reactivity during heterologous infection can even have functional implications for cross-reactive T cells, though the alterations to cytokine profiles and their consequences is often virus-specific. All of these alterations to T cell populations and their functional capacities will dictate the balance between cross-protection and immunopathology, and can even result in viral escape; The sum of these, ultimately defining the disease outcome.
Select references for examples of the impact of flavivirus T cell cross-reactivity and murine models of pathogenesis.
| AG129 | DENV4 | DENV2 | Protective | Cross-reactive T cells mediate reduction in viral titers and enhance survival | ( |
| AG129 | DENV3 | DENV2 | Protective | Cross-reactive T cells mediate reduction in viral titers and enhance survival | ( |
| AG129 | DENV1 | DENV2 | Protective | T cells contribute to protection during heterologous infection but are not necessary nor sufficient for protection from mortality | ( |
| Ifnar1−/− | DENV4 | DENV2 | Protective | Cross-reactive T cells mediate reduction in viral load and are required for reduction in morbidity | ( |
| WT C57BL/6 | DENV1 | DENV2 | Pathogenic | Elevated liver enzymes, low platelet counts, increased megakaryocytes in the spleen, more hematopoietic centers in the liver and increased vascular permeability. Observed phenotype requires TNF-α producing CD8+ T cells | ( |
| WT C57BL/6 | DENV2 | DENV1 | No effect | ( | |
| Ifnar1−/− | DENV2 | ZIKV | Protective | Cross-reactive CD8+ T cells mediate some protection from ZIKV-induced morbidity and mortality | ( |
| Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 | DENV2 | ZIKV | Protective | Enhanced viremia in mice deplete of CD8+ T cells during heterologous ZIKV challenge | ( |
| Ifnar1+/− pregnancy model | DENV2 | ZIKV | Protective | Reduced fetal resorption and reduced viral burden | ( |
Flavivirus cross-reactive T cell epitopes identified using HLA transgenic murine models, named in the same manner as the papers they were identified in with the exception of (*)NS52695.
| NS31682 | LPAIVREAI LPSIVREAL | DENV2/1/3 DENV4 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS31700 | APTRVVAAEM APTRVVASEM | DENV2/3/4 DENV1 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS32070 | KPRWLDARI RPKWLDARV | DENV2 DENV3 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS4b2280 | RPASAWTLYA HPASAWTLYA | DENV2/1/4 DENV1/3 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS52885 | TPRMCTREEF KPRLCTREEF | DENV2 DENV3 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS2a75 | RPALLVSFIF | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS3206 | APTRVVAAEM | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS3574 | KPRWMDARV | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| *NS52695 | RPGAFCIKVL | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| NS5539 | VPTGRTTW | ZIKV DENV2 | Ifnar1−/− HLA-B*0702 transgenic | ( |
| Env P1 | IRCIGVSNRDFVEGMSGGTW FNCLGMSNRDFLEGVSGATW AHCIGITDRDFIEGVHGGTW MRCVGIGNRDFVEGLSGATW MRCIGISNRDFVEGVSGGSW MRCVGVGNRDFVEGLSGATW MRCVGVGNRDFVEGVSGGAW | ZIKV WNV YFV DENV1 DENV2 DENV3 DENV4 | AG129 HLA-DR1, DR15, DQ8 transgenic | ( |
| Env P25 | ALVEFKDAHAKRQTVVVLGS HLVEFEPPHAATIKVLALGN LLVTFKTAHAKKQEVVVLGS RMVTFKVPHAKRQDVTVLGS | ZIKV YFV DENV1 DENV4 | AG129 HLA-DR15 transgenic | ( |
| Env P41 | HRSGSTIGKAFEATVRGAKR FKKGSSIGKMFEATARGARR YKKGSSIGKMFEATARGARR | ZIKV DENV1 DENV3 | AG129 HLA-DR15 transgenic | ( |
| Env P7 | YEASISDMASDSRCPTQGEA IEAKISNTTTDSRCPTQGEA IEAKLTNTTTESRCPTQGEP IEGKITNITTDSRCPTQGEA IEALISNITTATRCPTQGEP | ZIKV DENV1 DENV2 DENV3 DENV4 | AG129 HLA-DQ8 transgenic | ( |
| Env P8 | DSRCPTQGEAYLDKQSDTQY KAACPTMGEAHNDKRADPAF DSRCPTQGEATLVEEQDANF ESRCPTQGEPSLNEEQDKRF DSRCPTQGEAVLPEEQDQNY | ZIKV WNV DENV1 DENV2 DENV3 | AG129 HLA-DQ8 transgenic | ( |
In the original research publication the amino acid sequence was presumed to be ZIKV NS4b (NS4b.