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. 2012;7(7):e40865.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040865. Epub 2012 Jul 17.

Signal 3 cytokines as modulators of primary immune responses during infections: the interplay of type I IFN and IL-12 in CD8 T cell responses

Affiliations

Signal 3 cytokines as modulators of primary immune responses during infections: the interplay of type I IFN and IL-12 in CD8 T cell responses

Selina Jessica Keppler et al. PLoS One. 2012.

Abstract

Signal 3 cytokines, such as IL-12 or type I IFN, support expansion and differentiation of CD8 T cells in vivo. If and how these two signal 3 cytokines compensate each other in T cell activation during different infections is so far unknown. Using CD8 T cells lacking receptors for IL-12, type I IFN or both, we show that the expansion of CD8 T cells depends on type I IFN (LCMV infection), type I IFN and IL-12 (Listeria and vesicular stomatitis virus infection) or is largely independent of the two cytokines (vaccinia virus infection). Furthermore, we show that CD8 T cells lacking IL-12 and type I IFN signals are impaired in cytokine production and cytolytic activity in the context of VSV and Listeria infection. These effector CD8 T cells fail to express KLRG1, thereby exhibiting a memory-like phenotype which correlated with lower expression of the transcription factor T-bet and higher expression of Eomes. This indicates that the variable interplay of both signal 3 cytokines is mandatory for cell fate decision of CD8 T cells in the context of different infections. Furthermore our results demonstrate that the pathogen-induced overall inflammatory milieu and not the antigen load and/or the quality of antigen presentation critically determine the signal 3 dependence of CD8 T cells.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Expansion of CD8 T cells shows a complex pattern of dependency on signal 3 cytokines.
105 (Fig. 1 A–D) Thy1.1+ P14.WT, P14.IL-12RKO, P14.IFNARKO or P14.DOKO T cells were transferred into B6 mice (Thy1.2+) followed by infection with rVSVGP, rVVGP, LCMV or rListeria GP33. Kinetics of P14.WT (•) and P14.IFNARKO, P14.IL12RKO as well as P14. DOKO (○) T cells gated on CD8+ T cells in the blood at indicated time points. Values are expressed as mean ± SEM (n = 3). Results are representative of three independent experiments. IL-12 and type I IFN levels in sera of infected mice as determined by ELISA (for IL-12) or VSV protection assay (for type I IFN) are indicated (Fig. 1 E).
Figure 2
Figure 2. Analysis of P14 CD8 T cells in the context of a rVSVGP infection.
P14.WT, P14.IL-12RKO, P14.IFNARKO or P14.DOKO T cells were transferred into B6 mice followed by infection with rVSVGP. Analysis of spleen cells at day 5 after infection is shown. A, Relative and total P14 T cell numbers per spleen is shown. B, Analysis of cell division by BrdU incorporation. After adoptive transfer, recipient mice were treated with 2 mg of BrdU i.p. on day 4. BrdU staining of P14.WT or P14.DOKO T cells gated on CD8+ T cells on day 5 in the spleen is shown. Numbers in brackets indicate percentages of BrdU+ cells of total P14 T cells. C, Analysis of KLRG1 and CD127 expression on P14 T cells. Plots are gated on CD8+, Thy1.1+ (P14) cells. D, Statistical analysis of T cell differentiation. Percentages of KLRG1 and CD127 positive P14 T cells of total P14 T cells are depicted. E, Cytolytic activity of P14 T cells was determined five days post infection by a 51Cr-release assay. Gp33-41 peptide-loaded or adeno peptide-loaded EL-4 cells (control) were used as targets. Equal numbers of purified P14 T cells were used as effectors. Expression of IFN-γ (F) and TNF-α (G) of P14 T cells. Percentages of cytokine positive P14 T cells of total P14 T cells, as well as MFI of cytokine expression are indicated. Values are expressed as mean ± SEM (n = 3). *p<0,01. Results are representative of three independent experiments.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Analysis of P14 CD8 T cells in the context of a rListeriaGP33 infection.
P14.WT, P14.IL-12RKO, P14.IFNARKO or P14.DOKO T cells were transferred into B6 mice followed by infection with rListeriaGP33. Analysis of spleen cells at day 5.5 after infection is shown. A, Relative and total P14 T cell numbers per spleen is shown. B, Analysis of cell division by BrdU incorporation. After adoptive transfer, recipient mice were treated with 2 mg of BrdU i.p. on day 4. BrdU staining of P14.WT or P14.DOKO T cells gated on CD8+ T cells on day 5 in the spleen is shown. Numbers in brackets indicate percentages of BrdU+ cells of total P14 T cells. C, Analysis of KLRG1 and CD127 expression on P14 T cells. Plots are gated on CD8+, Thy1.1+ (P14) cells. D, Statistical analysis of T cell differentiation. Percentages of KLRG1 and CD127 positive P14 T cells of total P14 T cells are depicted. E, Cytolytic activity of P14 T cells was determined five days post infection by a 51Cr-release assay. Gp33-41 peptide-loaded or adeno peptide-loaded EL-4 cells (control) were used as targets. Equal numbers of purified P14 T cells were used as effectors. Expression of IFN-γ (F) and TNF-α (G) of P14 T cells. Percentages of cytokine positive P14 T cells of total P14 T cells, as well as MFI of cytokine expression are indicated. Values are expressed as mean ± SEM (n = 3). *p<0,01. Results are representative of three independent experiments.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Expression of T-box transcription factors T-bet and Eomes after infections with rVSVGP and rListeriaGP33 infection.
P14.WT, P14.IL-12RKO, P14.IFNARKO or P14.DOKO T cells were transferred into B6 mice followed by infection with A, rVSVGP, or B, rListeriaGP33. Expression of T-bet and Eomes was analyzed in the spleen on day 5 after infection. Histograms show intracellular expression of T-bet or Eomes in P14.WT (black line), P14.DOKO (red line) and naïve P14 CD8 T cells (filled curve) directly ex vivo. Percentages of T-bet or Eomes positive P14 T cells of total P14 T cells are indicated (middle panels). Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of T-bet or Eomes expression of P14 T cells is shown (right panels). p<0,01. Results are representative of two independent experiments.
Figure 5
Figure 5. The pathogen-induced inflammatory milieu determines signal 3 dependence of CD8 T cells.
P14.WT or P14.IFNARKO T cells were transferred into B6 mice followed by infection with A, rVVGP, rVVGP and LCMV8.7 or LCMV8.7 alone or, B, rVSVGP, rVSVGP and LCMV8.7 or LCMV8.7 alone. Analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes at day 5 after infection is shown. Numbers in brackets indicate percentages of Thy1.1 positive of total CD8 T cells. Results are representative of two independent experiments.
Figure 6
Figure 6. Infection independent T cell expansion can be suppressed by the LCMV-induced inflammatory milieu.
A timeline of the experiment is shown in A. P14.WT or P14.IFNARKO T cells were transferred into H8 mice at day −1, followed by B, treatment with anti-CD40 antibody alone (day 0 and day 2), C, treatment with anti-CD40 antibody and infection with LCMV8.7 or D, infection with LCMV8.7 alone. Expansion of transferred CD8 T cells at day 5 and day 7 after treatment and/or infection is shown in the blood. Numbers in brackets indicate percentages of Thy1.1 positive of total CD8 T cells. Kinetics in the right panels indicates the expansion of the transferred Thy1.1 T cells of total CD8 T cells from day 3 to day 7 in the blood. Values are expressed as mean ± SEM (n = 3). Results are representative of two independent experiments.

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