Human Ebola virus infection results in substantial immune activation

Anita K. McElroy(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Rama Akondy(Emory and Henry College), Carl W. Davis(Emory and Henry College), Ali H. Ellebedy(Emory and Henry College), Aneesh K. Mehta(Office of Infectious Diseases), Colleen S. Kraft(Emory University), G. Marshall Lyon(Office of Infectious Diseases), Bruce S. Ribner(Office of Infectious Diseases), Jay B. Varkey(Office of Infectious Diseases), John Sidney(La Jolla Institute for Immunology), Alessandro Sette(La Jolla Institute for Immunology), Shelley Campbell(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Ute Ströher(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Inger K. Damon(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Stuart T. Nichol(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Christina F. Spiropoulou(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Rafi Ahmed(Emory and Henry College)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 9, 2015
Cited by 305

Abstract

Four Ebola patients received care at Emory University Hospital, presenting a unique opportunity to examine the cellular immune responses during acute Ebola virus infection. We found striking activation of both B and T cells in all four patients. Plasmablast frequencies were 10-50% of B cells, compared with less than 1% in healthy individuals. Many of these proliferating plasmablasts were IgG-positive, and this finding coincided with the presence of Ebola virus-specific IgG in the serum. Activated CD4 T cells ranged from 5 to 30%, compared with 1-2% in healthy controls. The most pronounced responses were seen in CD8 T cells, with over 50% of the CD8 T cells expressing markers of activation and proliferation. Taken together, these results suggest that all four patients developed robust immune responses during the acute phase of Ebola virus infection, a finding that would not have been predicted based on our current assumptions about the highly immunosuppressive nature of Ebola virus. Also, quite surprisingly, we found sustained immune activation after the virus was cleared from the plasma, observed most strikingly in the persistence of activated CD8 T cells, even 1 mo after the patients' discharge from the hospital. These results suggest continued antigen stimulation after resolution of the disease. From these convalescent time points, we identified CD4 and CD8 T-cell responses to several Ebola virus proteins, most notably the viral nucleoprotein. Knowledge of the viral proteins targeted by T cells during natural infection should be useful in designing vaccines against Ebola virus.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis