Conventional and innate lymphocytes response at the acute phase of HEV infection in transplanted patients
- PMID: 26947133
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jinf.2016.02.016
Conventional and innate lymphocytes response at the acute phase of HEV infection in transplanted patients
Abstract
Objectives: The hepatitis E virus (HEV) causes usually benign and spontaneously resolving acute hepatitis in immunocompetent individuals. In immunocompromised patients with a solid-organ transplant (SOT), chronic infections occur in about 2/3 of cases. We aimed to evaluate the immune cells implicated at the acute phase of HEV infection.
Methods: We studied the activation and memory markers on CD4, CD8, γδ and NK cells in 32 HEV-free control SOT patients and 23 SOT recipients, including 14 who became chronically infected. Samples from 7 immunocompetent individuals with an acute infection and 8 healthy donor samples were included for comparison.
Results: In acutely-infected SOT patients, NK and Vδ2 cells, but not other γδ cells, had an increased expression of CD69. Based on CD45RA/CD27 markers, solid-organ recipients infected with HEV contained a larger pool of circulating naive subsets among lymphocyte Tγδ cells. However, these alterations of Vδ2 cells were not associated with HEV clearance. Only the adaptive IFN-γ responses to HEV peptides, determined by ELISpot, were associated with a favorable outcome in immunocompromised patients.
Conclusions: Transplanted patients mobilized their γδ cells at the acute phase of infection. Their precise role in HEV infection will thus deserve further investigations as they could be specifically immunomanipulated.
Keywords: Chronic viral hepatitis; Gamma-delta T cells; Hepatitis E virus; Solid organ transplantation.
Copyright © 2016 The British Infection Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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