CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.

Zika virus (ZIKV) has gained worldwide attention since it emerged, and a global effort is underway to understand the correlates of protection and develop diagnostics to identify rates of infection. As new therapeutics and vaccine approaches are evaluated in clinical trials, additional effort is focu...

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Main Authors: Mariah Hassert, Kyle J Wolf, Katherine E Schwetye, Richard J DiPaolo, James D Brien, Amelia K Pinto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-09-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6136803?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f37dc0cffc014168a69169022228d8152020-11-25T00:29:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742018-09-01149e100723710.1371/journal.ppat.1007237CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.Mariah HassertKyle J WolfKatherine E SchwetyeRichard J DiPaoloJames D BrienAmelia K PintoZika virus (ZIKV) has gained worldwide attention since it emerged, and a global effort is underway to understand the correlates of protection and develop diagnostics to identify rates of infection. As new therapeutics and vaccine approaches are evaluated in clinical trials, additional effort is focused on identifying the adaptive immune correlates of protection against ZIKV disease. To aid in this endeavor we have begun to dissect the role of CD4+T cells in the protection against neuroinvasive ZIKV disease. We have identified an important role for CD4+T cells in protection, demonstrating that in the absence of CD4+T cells mice have more severe neurological sequela and significant increases in viral titers in the central nervous system (CNS). The transfer of CD4+T cells from ZIKV immune mice protect type I interferon receptor deficient animals from a lethal challenge; showing that the CD4+T cell response is necessary and sufficient for control of ZIKV disease. Using a peptide library spanning the complete ZIKV polyprotein, we identified both ZIKV-encoded CD4+T cell epitopes that initiate immune responses, and ZIKV specific CD4+T cell receptors that recognize these epitopes. Within the ZIKV antigen-specific TCRβ repertoire, we uncovered a high degree of diversity both in response to a single epitope and among different mice responding to a CD4+T cell epitope. Overall this study identifies a novel role for polyfunctional and polyclonal CD4+T cells in providing protection against ZIKV infection and highlights the need for vaccines to develop robust CD4+T cell responses to prevent ZIKV neuroinvasion and limit replication within the CNS.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6136803?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mariah Hassert
Kyle J Wolf
Katherine E Schwetye
Richard J DiPaolo
James D Brien
Amelia K Pinto
spellingShingle Mariah Hassert
Kyle J Wolf
Katherine E Schwetye
Richard J DiPaolo
James D Brien
Amelia K Pinto
CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Mariah Hassert
Kyle J Wolf
Katherine E Schwetye
Richard J DiPaolo
James D Brien
Amelia K Pinto
author_sort Mariah Hassert
title CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
title_short CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
title_full CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
title_fullStr CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
title_full_unstemmed CD4+T cells mediate protection against Zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
title_sort cd4+t cells mediate protection against zika associated severe disease in a mouse model of infection.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Zika virus (ZIKV) has gained worldwide attention since it emerged, and a global effort is underway to understand the correlates of protection and develop diagnostics to identify rates of infection. As new therapeutics and vaccine approaches are evaluated in clinical trials, additional effort is focused on identifying the adaptive immune correlates of protection against ZIKV disease. To aid in this endeavor we have begun to dissect the role of CD4+T cells in the protection against neuroinvasive ZIKV disease. We have identified an important role for CD4+T cells in protection, demonstrating that in the absence of CD4+T cells mice have more severe neurological sequela and significant increases in viral titers in the central nervous system (CNS). The transfer of CD4+T cells from ZIKV immune mice protect type I interferon receptor deficient animals from a lethal challenge; showing that the CD4+T cell response is necessary and sufficient for control of ZIKV disease. Using a peptide library spanning the complete ZIKV polyprotein, we identified both ZIKV-encoded CD4+T cell epitopes that initiate immune responses, and ZIKV specific CD4+T cell receptors that recognize these epitopes. Within the ZIKV antigen-specific TCRβ repertoire, we uncovered a high degree of diversity both in response to a single epitope and among different mice responding to a CD4+T cell epitope. Overall this study identifies a novel role for polyfunctional and polyclonal CD4+T cells in providing protection against ZIKV infection and highlights the need for vaccines to develop robust CD4+T cell responses to prevent ZIKV neuroinvasion and limit replication within the CNS.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6136803?pdf=render
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