Coxsackievirus infection induces direct pancreatic β cell killing but poor antiviral CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell responses
Vecchio, Federica; Carré, Alexia; Korenkov, Daniil; Zhou, Zhicheng; Apaolaza, Paola; Tuomela, Soile; Burgos-Morales, Orlando; Snowhite, Isaac; Perez-Hernandez, Javier; Brandao, Barbara; Afonso, Georgia; Halliez, Clémentine; Kaddis, John; Kent, Sally C.; Nakayama, Maki; Richardson, Sarah J.; Vinh, Joelle; Verdier, Yann; Laiho, Jutta; Scharfmann, Raphael; Solimena, Michele; Marinicova, Zuzana; Bismuth, Elise; Lucidarme, Nadine; Sanchez, Janine; Bustamante, Carmen; Gomez, Patricia; Buus, Soren; You, Sylvaine; Pugliese, Alberto; Hyoty, Heikki; Rodriguez-Calvo, Teresa; Flodstrom-Tullberg, Malin; Mallone, Roberto (2024-03)
Vecchio, Federica
Carré, Alexia
Korenkov, Daniil
Zhou, Zhicheng
Apaolaza, Paola
Tuomela, Soile
Burgos-Morales, Orlando
Snowhite, Isaac
Perez-Hernandez, Javier
Brandao, Barbara
Afonso, Georgia
Halliez, Clémentine
Kaddis, John
Kent, Sally C.
Nakayama, Maki
Richardson, Sarah J.
Vinh, Joelle
Verdier, Yann
Laiho, Jutta
Scharfmann, Raphael
Solimena, Michele
Marinicova, Zuzana
Bismuth, Elise
Lucidarme, Nadine
Sanchez, Janine
Bustamante, Carmen
Gomez, Patricia
Buus, Soren
You, Sylvaine
Pugliese, Alberto
Hyoty, Heikki
Rodriguez-Calvo, Teresa
Flodstrom-Tullberg, Malin
Mallone, Roberto
03 / 2024
Science Advances
eadl1122
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202404173650
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202404173650
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Coxsackievirus B (CVB) infection of pancreatic β cells is associated with β cell autoimmunity and type 1 diabetes. We investigated how CVB affects human β cells and anti-CVB T cell responses. β cells were efficiently infected by CVB in vitro, down-regulated human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I, and presented few, selected HLA-bound viral peptides. Circulating CD8+ T cells from CVB–seropositive individuals recognized a fraction of these peptides; only another subfraction was targeted by effector/memory T cells that expressed exhaustion marker PD-1. T cells recognizing a CVB epitope cross-reacted with β cell antigen GAD. Infected β cells, which formed filopodia to propagate infection, were more efficiently killed by CVB than by CVB-reactive T cells. Our in vitro and ex vivo data highlight limited CD8+ T cell responses to CVB, supporting the rationale for CVB vaccination trials for type 1 diabetes prevention. CD8+ T cells recognizing structural and nonstructural CVB epitopes provide biomarkers to differentially follow response to infection and vaccination.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [23755]