Memory CD8 T Cells Protect against Cytomegalovirus Disease by Formation of Nodular Inflammatory Foci Preventing Intra-Tissue Virus Spread

Viruses. 2022 May 25;14(6):1145. doi: 10.3390/v14061145.

Abstract

Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) are controlled by innate and adaptive immune responses in an immunocompetent host while causing multiple organ diseases in an immunocompromised host. A risk group of high clinical relevance comprises transiently immunocompromised recipients of hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) in the "window of risk" between eradicative therapy of hematopoietic malignancies and complete reconstitution of the immune system. Cellular immunotherapy by adoptive transfer of CMV-specific CD8 T cells is an option to prevent CMV disease by controlling a primary or reactivated infection. While experimental models have revealed a viral epitope-specific antiviral function of cognate CD8 T cells, the site at which control is exerted remained unidentified. The observation that remarkably few transferred cells protect all organs may indicate an early blockade of virus dissemination from a primary site of productive infection to various target organs. Alternatively, it could indicate clonal expansion of a few transferred CD8 T cells for preventing intra-tissue virus spread after successful initial organ colonization. Our data in the mouse model of murine CMV infection provide evidence in support of the second hypothesis. We show that transferred cells vigorously proliferate to prevent virus spread, and thus viral histopathology, by confining and eventually resolving tissue infection within nodular inflammatory foci.

Keywords: adoptive cell transfer; antiviral protection; cytomegalovirus (CMV); growth kinetics; histopathology; immunotherapy; liver infection; memory CD8 T cells; nodular inflammatory focus (NIF); virus spread.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adoptive Transfer
  • Animals
  • CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes
  • Cytomegalovirus Infections*
  • Cytomegalovirus*
  • Immunocompromised Host
  • Mice

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Collaborative Research Center (CRC) 1292: individual projects TP11 ‘Viral evasion of innate and adaptive immune cells and inbetweeners’ (M.J.R. and N.A.L.) and TP14 ‘Immunomodulation of cytomegalovirus latency and reactivation by regulatory T cells and dendritic cells’ (R.H.).