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Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most important cause of respiratory tract illness especially in young infants that develop severe disease requiring hospitalization, and accounting for 74,000–126,000 admissions in the United States (Rezaee et al., 2017; Resch, 2017). Observations of neonatal...

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Autores principales: Thakar, Juilee, Qian, Yu, Benoodt, Lauren, Roumanes, David, Qiu, Xing, Laniewski, Nathan, Chu, ChinYi, Slaunwhite, Christopher, Wang, Lu, Mandava, Aishwarya, Chang, Ivan, Falsey, Ann R., Caserta, Mary T., Mariani, Thomas J., Scheuermann, Richard H., Walsh, Edward E., Topham, David J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7280769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32529184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2020.100065
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author Thakar, Juilee
Qian, Yu
Benoodt, Lauren
Roumanes, David
Qiu, Xing
Laniewski, Nathan
Chu, ChinYi
Slaunwhite, Christopher
Wang, Lu
Mandava, Aishwarya
Chang, Ivan
Falsey, Ann R.
Caserta, Mary T.
Mariani, Thomas J.
Scheuermann, Richard H.
Walsh, Edward E.
Topham, David J.
author_facet Thakar, Juilee
Qian, Yu
Benoodt, Lauren
Roumanes, David
Qiu, Xing
Laniewski, Nathan
Chu, ChinYi
Slaunwhite, Christopher
Wang, Lu
Mandava, Aishwarya
Chang, Ivan
Falsey, Ann R.
Caserta, Mary T.
Mariani, Thomas J.
Scheuermann, Richard H.
Walsh, Edward E.
Topham, David J.
author_sort Thakar, Juilee
collection PubMed
description Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most important cause of respiratory tract illness especially in young infants that develop severe disease requiring hospitalization, and accounting for 74,000–126,000 admissions in the United States (Rezaee et al., 2017; Resch, 2017). Observations of neonatal and infant T cells suggest that they may express different immune markers compared to T-cells from older children. Flow cytometry analysis of cellular responses using “conventional” anti-viral markers (IL2, IFN-γ, TNF, IL10 and IL4) upon RSV-peptide stimulation detected an overall low RSV response in peripheral blood. Therefore we sought an unbiased approach to identify RSV-specific immune markers using RNA-sequencing upon stimulation of infant PBMCs with overlapping peptides representing RSV antigens. To understand the cellular response using transcriptional signatures, transcription factors and cell-type specific signatures were used to investigate breadth of response across peptides. Unexpected from the ICS data, M peptide induced a response equivalent to the F-peptide and was characterized by activation of GATA2, 3, STAT3 and IRF1. This along with upregulation of several unconventional T cell signatures was only observed upon M-peptide stimulation. Moreover, signatures of natural RSV infections were identified from the data available in the public domain to investigate similarities between transcriptional signatures from PBMCs and upon peptide stimulation. This analysis also suggested activation of T cell response upon M-peptide stimulation. Hence, based on transcriptional response, markers were chosen to validate the role of M-peptide in activation of T cells. Indeed, CD4+CXCL9+ cells were identified upon M-peptide stimulation by flow cytometry. Future work using additional markers identified in this study could reveal additional unconventional T cells responding to RSV infections in infants. In conclusion, T cell responses to RSV in infants may not follow the canonical Th1/Th2 patterns of effector responses but include additional functions that may be unique to the neonatal period and correlate with clinical outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-72807692020-06-10 Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein Thakar, Juilee Qian, Yu Benoodt, Lauren Roumanes, David Qiu, Xing Laniewski, Nathan Chu, ChinYi Slaunwhite, Christopher Wang, Lu Mandava, Aishwarya Chang, Ivan Falsey, Ann R. Caserta, Mary T. Mariani, Thomas J. Scheuermann, Richard H. Walsh, Edward E. Topham, David J. Vaccine X Regular paper Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most important cause of respiratory tract illness especially in young infants that develop severe disease requiring hospitalization, and accounting for 74,000–126,000 admissions in the United States (Rezaee et al., 2017; Resch, 2017). Observations of neonatal and infant T cells suggest that they may express different immune markers compared to T-cells from older children. Flow cytometry analysis of cellular responses using “conventional” anti-viral markers (IL2, IFN-γ, TNF, IL10 and IL4) upon RSV-peptide stimulation detected an overall low RSV response in peripheral blood. Therefore we sought an unbiased approach to identify RSV-specific immune markers using RNA-sequencing upon stimulation of infant PBMCs with overlapping peptides representing RSV antigens. To understand the cellular response using transcriptional signatures, transcription factors and cell-type specific signatures were used to investigate breadth of response across peptides. Unexpected from the ICS data, M peptide induced a response equivalent to the F-peptide and was characterized by activation of GATA2, 3, STAT3 and IRF1. This along with upregulation of several unconventional T cell signatures was only observed upon M-peptide stimulation. Moreover, signatures of natural RSV infections were identified from the data available in the public domain to investigate similarities between transcriptional signatures from PBMCs and upon peptide stimulation. This analysis also suggested activation of T cell response upon M-peptide stimulation. Hence, based on transcriptional response, markers were chosen to validate the role of M-peptide in activation of T cells. Indeed, CD4+CXCL9+ cells were identified upon M-peptide stimulation by flow cytometry. Future work using additional markers identified in this study could reveal additional unconventional T cells responding to RSV infections in infants. In conclusion, T cell responses to RSV in infants may not follow the canonical Th1/Th2 patterns of effector responses but include additional functions that may be unique to the neonatal period and correlate with clinical outcomes. Elsevier 2020-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7280769/ /pubmed/32529184 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2020.100065 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular paper
Thakar, Juilee
Qian, Yu
Benoodt, Lauren
Roumanes, David
Qiu, Xing
Laniewski, Nathan
Chu, ChinYi
Slaunwhite, Christopher
Wang, Lu
Mandava, Aishwarya
Chang, Ivan
Falsey, Ann R.
Caserta, Mary T.
Mariani, Thomas J.
Scheuermann, Richard H.
Walsh, Edward E.
Topham, David J.
Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title_full Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title_fullStr Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title_full_unstemmed Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title_short Unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals CD4 T cell response to RSV matrix protein
title_sort unbiased analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells reveals cd4 t cell response to rsv matrix protein
topic Regular paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7280769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32529184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvacx.2020.100065
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