Chronic HCV infection and associated liver disease are associated with impaired response to HBV/HAV vaccine and greater morbid outcomes upon pathogen exposure, yet strategies to improve these prophylactic vaccine responses are not available. Though effectiveness of HCV therapy will continue to improve, the substantial majority of HCV infected individuals remain untreated, and improving vaccine response will remain an important goal over the coming decade. Effects of HCV on the immune system that may contribute to impaired vaccine response include decreased naive CD4 cell and dendritic cell (DC) subset numbers, skewing of T-, B- and NK-cell subsets, and T cell exhaustion. Additionally, chronic HCV infection and associated liver disease are associated with immune activation (sCD14, LPS, IL-6, HLA-DR+CD38+CD4/8 cells). Emerging evidence, including our data, indicates HCV associated immune activation (CD16+56-NK subset frequency and sCD14) correlates with disease stage and negatively predicts host response to IFN therapy. To identify molecular drivers of immune activation we performed a non-biased comprehensive plasma proteome analysis to determine the correlates of immune activation. Our lead molecule was plasma ENPP2 (autotaxin). ENPP2 was elevated during HCV infection with advanced liver disease, and best correlated with CD4 activation during HCV infection. The product of ENPP2 activity, lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), activates T cells, providing a potential pathway amenable to therapeutic interruption. We propose HCV induced immune activation impairs host response to neoantigen (e.g. vaccine and new infectious challenge). Supporting this, during HIV infection where immune activation also exists, our preliminary data indicate higher CD4+HLADR+CD38+ T cell frequency negatively predicts host response to Hepatitis A vaccine, while greater naive CD4+ numbers positively predict response. Recent evidence also indicates markers of immune activation negatively predict HBV vaccine response during HCV infection. Older age is also associated with susceptibility to infection and impaired response to vaccine. The combined effects of aging and chronic HCV infection on the immune system are not yet characterized, but highly significant as this patient population continues to grow. Importantly, we observed that both aging and chronic HCV infection result in higher ENPP2 levels. Therefore ENPP2 may be a common therapeutic target, and an ideal metric in our proposed analyses. With the growing age of the US and VA HCV infected population, and with morbidity (cirrhosis, HCC, impaired therapy response) projected to peak in 2030 primarily in the aged HCV population, we propose that quantifying the combined effects of age and chronic HCV infection on the immune system, and the impact of ENPP2 on the neoantigen response will guide therapeutic strategies.
In Aim 1 we will Determine the independent contributions of untreated HCV, immune activation, age, ENPP2 and LPA to neoantigen (hepatitis A/B vaccine) vs. recall antigen (tetanus booster vaccine) response.
In Aim 2 we will Determine the effect of ENPP2 inhibition on murine host response to neoantigen in the setting of chronic LCMV infection.

Public Health Relevance

HCV, liver disease, and age are becoming dominant sources of morbidity in the HCV infected population, and due to the high prevalence of HCV in the veteran population this is a growing issue of concern. Mechanisms underlying HCV and age mediated effects are unclear. Mechanism based studies are likely to identify novel therapeutic strategies for managing this growing population of veterans. The proposed studies directly address this growing need, and specifically targets a potential pathway for therapeutic intervention.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Veterans Affairs (VA)
Type
Non-HHS Research Projects (I01)
Project #
1I01CX001104-01
Application #
8732052
Study Section
Infectious Diseases A (INFA)
Project Start
2014-10-01
Project End
2018-09-30
Budget Start
2014-10-01
Budget End
2015-09-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
093016124
City
Cleveland
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
44141
Kostadinova, Lenche; Shive, Carey L; Zebrowski, Elizabeth et al. (2018) Soluble Markers of Immune Activation Differentially Normalize and Selectively Associate with Improvement in AST, ALT, Albumin, and Transient Elastography During IFN-Free HCV Therapy. Pathog Immun 3:149-163
Shive, Carey L; Judge, Chelsey J; Clagett, Brian et al. (2018) Pre-vaccine plasma levels of soluble inflammatory indices negatively predict responses to HAV, HBV, and tetanus vaccines in HCV and HIV infection. Vaccine 36:453-460
Ahmad, Hassan; Khan, Mariam; Laugle, Michelle et al. (2018) Red Cell Distribution Width Is Positively Correlated with Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease 10-Year Risk Score, Age, and CRP in Spondyloarthritis with Axial or Peripheral Disease. Int J Rheumatol 2018:2476239
Judge, Chelsey J; Kostadinova, Lenche; Sherman, Kenneth E et al. (2017) CD56bright NK IL-7R? expression negatively associates with HCV level, and IL-7-induced NK function is impaired during HCV and HIV infections. J Leukoc Biol 102:171-184
Davitkov, Perica; Chandar, Apoorva Krishna; Hirsch, Amy et al. (2016) Treatment Selection Choices Should Not Be Based on Benefits or Costs Alone: A Head-to-Head Randomized Controlled Trial of Antiviral Drugs for Hepatitis C. PLoS One 11:e0163945
Judge, Chelsey J; Sandberg, Johan K; Funderburg, Nicholas T et al. (2016) Brief Report: CD14brightCD16- monocytes and sCD14 level negatively associate with CD4-memory T-cell frequency and predict HCV-decline on therapy. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 73:258-262
Kostadinova, Lenche; Shive, Carey L; Judge, Chelsey et al. (2016) During Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Infection and HCV-HIV Coinfection, an Elevated Plasma Level of Autotaxin Is Associated With Lysophosphatidic Acid and Markers of Immune Activation That Normalize During Interferon-Free HCV Therapy. J Infect Dis 214:1438-1448
Shive, Carey L; Jiang, Wei; Anthony, Donald D et al. (2015) Soluble CD14 is a nonspecific marker of monocyte activation. AIDS 29:1263-5
Reyes-Avilés, Elane; Kostadinova, Lenche; Rusterholtz, Anne et al. (2015) Presence of Rheumatoid Factor during Chronic HCV Infection Is Associated with Expansion of Mature Activated Memory B-Cells that Are Hypo-Responsive to B-Cell Receptor Stimulation and Persist during the Early Stage of IFN Free Therapy. PLoS One 10:e0144629
Judge, Chelsey J; Reyes-Aviles, Elane; Conry, Sara J et al. (2015) HBD-3 induces NK cell activation, IFN-? secretion and mDC dependent cytolytic function. Cell Immunol 297:61-8

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