Functional Comparison of T Cells Recognizing Cytomegalovirus pp65 and Intermediate‐Early Antigen Polypeptides in Hematopoietic Stem‐Cell Transplant and Solid Organ Transplant Recipients

Simon F. Lacey(City of Hope), Corinna La Rosa(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale), Wendy Zhou(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale), Madeva C. Sharma(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale), Joy Martinez(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale), Aparna Krishnan(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale), Ghislaine Gallez‐Hawkins, Lia Thao, Jeff Longmate(Beckman Research Institute), Ricardo Spielberger(City of Hope), Stephen J. Forman(City of Hope), Ajit P. Limaye(University of Washington), John A. Zaia, Don J. Diamond(Institut de Recherche Vaccinale)
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
October 17, 2006
Cited by 44Open Access
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Abstract

The functional status of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) populations recognizing cytomegalovirus intermediate-early antigen (IE1) and pp65 polypeptides was investigated in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from hematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HSCT) and solid organ transplant recipients. Combined flow-based CD107a/b degranulation/mobilization and intracellular cytokine (ICC) assays using peptide libraries as antigens indicated that a significantly higher proportion of pp65-specific CTLs were in a more mature functional state, compared with IE1-specific CTLs. Degranulation/multiple cytokine ICC assays also indicated that a significantly higher proportion of pp65-specific than IE1-specific CTLs secreted both interferon- gamma and tumor necrosis factor- alpha and possessed greater cytotoxic potential. These results support our earlier findings of functional differences between CTLs recognizing individual epitopes within the IE1 and pp65 antigens in healthy donors and HSCT recipients and extend them to a broader array of human leukocyte antigen-restricted responses to those antigens. We also provide evidence of a relationship between cytotoxic function and the ability of cytomegalovirus-specific CTLs to secrete multiple cytokines.


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