Many viruses are potent inducers of T cell responses, resulting in the generation of high levels of CD8 cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). T cell mediated immune responses not only assist in clearing infections but can also lead to symptomatic disease and pathogenesis, and this can vary significantly in severity between individuals. In nature the host has a history of multiple sequential infections and develops memory T cell pools of significant size and complexity. My previous research using a mouse system which mimics these natural conditions has shown that these memory T cell populations are not dormant T cell reservoirs but are, in fact, continuously cycling. They are also frequently cross-reactive with other unrelated pathogens and can also be reactivated to participate in responses to new unrelated viruses, resulting in either protective immunity or severe immunopathology. These results led us to propose an immunological network whereby CD8 T cells often crossreact with more than one antigen, and where memory T cell pools are continually being modified as they are stimulated by and contribute to the immune responses against putatively unrelated pathogens. Isolated reports exist of crossreactive human T cell clones, and preliminary work in this project shows that there is crossreactivity between a very common EBV epitope (BMLF1) and an influenza A epitope (M1). However, it is unclear what the magnitude of such crossreactive T cell responses are in humans. This type of crossreactivity may partially explain variations in pathogenesis caused by the same virus, and knowledge of such crossreactivity may be important for future vaccine development. The purpose of this study is to systematically examine whether crossreactive T cell responses are common in human virus infections, focusing on acute and memory CD8 T cell responses to EBV, with the long term goal of determining if they pay a role in pathogenesis. These studies will test the hypothesis that 1) there is reactivation of potentially crossreactive memory T cells to FLU or CMV during acute EBV infection, 2) the same TcR on dual reactive T cell clones in recognizing both epitopes and receiving qualitatively different signals from each epitope, and 3) the frequency of crossreactive memory T cells is higher in older, antigen experienced individuals.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
1P01AI049320-01
Application #
6465539
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAI1)
Project Start
2001-05-24
Project End
2006-04-30
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester
Department
Type
DUNS #
660735098
City
Worcester
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
01655
Weiss, Eric R; Lamers, Susanna L; Henderson, Jennifer L et al. (2018) Early Epstein-Barr Virus Genomic Diversity and Convergence toward the B95.8 Genome in Primary Infection. J Virol 92:
Song, InYoung; Gil, Anna; Mishra, Rabinarayan et al. (2017) Broad TCR repertoire and diverse structural solutions for recognition of an immunodominant CD8+ T cell epitope. Nat Struct Mol Biol 24:395-406
Watkin, Levi B; Mishra, Rabinarayan; Gil, Anna et al. (2017) Unique influenza A cross-reactive memory CD8 T-cell receptor repertoire has a potential to protect against EBV seroconversion. J Allergy Clin Immunol 140:1206-1210
Weiss, Eric R; Alter, Galit; Ogembo, Javier Gordon et al. (2017) High Epstein-Barr Virus Load and Genomic Diversity Are Associated with Generation of gp350-Specific Neutralizing Antibodies following Acute Infectious Mononucleosis. J Virol 91:
Aslan, Nuray; Watkin, Levi B; Gil, Anna et al. (2017) Severity of Acute Infectious Mononucleosis Correlates with Cross-Reactive Influenza CD8 T-Cell Receptor Repertoires. MBio 8:
Gil, Anna; Yassai, Maryam B; Naumov, Yuri N et al. (2015) Narrowing of human influenza A virus-specific T cell receptor ? and ? repertoires with increasing age. J Virol 89:4102-16
Gil, Anna; Kenney, Laurie L; Mishra, Rabinarayan et al. (2015) Vaccination and heterologous immunity: educating the immune system. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 109:62-9
Greenough, Thomas C; Straubhaar, Juerg R; Kamga, Larisa et al. (2015) A Gene Expression Signature That Correlates with CD8+ T Cell Expansion in Acute EBV Infection. J Immunol 195:4185-97
Renzette, Nicholas; Somasundaran, Mohan; Brewster, Frank et al. (2014) Epstein-Barr virus latent membrane protein 1 genetic variability in peripheral blood B cells and oropharyngeal fluids. J Virol 88:3744-55
Chen, Alex T; Cornberg, Markus; Gras, Stephanie et al. (2012) Loss of anti-viral immunity by infection with a virus encoding a cross-reactive pathogenic epitope. PLoS Pathog 8:e1002633

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