Cytokines induced during chronic hepatitis B virus infection promote a pathway for NK cell–mediated liver damage

Claire Dunn(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Maurizia Rossana Brunetto(Ospedale Santa Chiara), Gary Reynolds(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), Theodoros Christophides(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Patrick Kennedy, Pietro Lampertico(University of Milan), Abhishek Das(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Andre Lopes(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Persephone Borrow(University of Oxford), Kevin T. Williams(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), E Humphreys(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), Simon C. Afford(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), David Adams(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), Antonio Bertoletti, Mala K. Maini(Institute of Infection and Immunity)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
March 12, 2007
Cited by 418Open Access
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Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) causes chronic infection in more than 350 million people worldwide. It replicates in hepatocytes but is non-cytopathic; liver damage is thought to be immune mediated. Here, we investigated the role of innate immune responses in mediating liver damage in patients with chronic HBV infection. Longitudinal analysis revealed a temporal correlation between flares of liver inflammation and fluctuations in interleukin (IL)-8, interferon (IFN)-alpha, and natural killer (NK) cell expression of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) directly ex vivo. A cross-sectional study confirmed these findings in patients with HBV-related liver inflammation compared with healthy carriers. Activated, TRAIL-expressing NK cells were further enriched in the liver of patients with chronic HBV infection, while their hepatocytes expressed increased levels of a TRAIL death-inducing receptor. IFN-alpha concentrations found in patients were capable of activating NK cells to induce TRAIL-mediated hepatocyte apoptosis in vitro. The pathogenic potential of this pathway could be further enhanced by the ability of the IFN-alpha/IL-8 combination to dysregulate the balance of death-inducing and regulatory TRAIL receptors expressed on hepatocytes. We conclude that NK cells may contribute to liver inflammation by TRAIL-mediated death of hepatocytes and demonstrate that this non-antigen-specific mechanism can be switched on by cytokines produced during active HBV infection.


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