Abstract

γδ T lymphocytes are unconventional immune cells, which have both innate- and adaptive-like features allowing them to respond to a wide spectrum of pathogens. For many years, we and others have reported on the role of these cells in the immune response to human cytomegalovirus in transplant patients, pregnant women, neonates, immunodeficient children, and healthy people. Indeed, and as described for CD8+ T cells, CMV infection leaves a specific imprint on the γδ T cell compartment: (i) driving a long-lasting expansion of oligoclonal γδ T cells in the blood of seropositive individuals, (ii) inducing their differentiation into effector/memory cells expressing a TEMRA phenotype, and (iii) enhancing their antiviral effector functions (i.e., cytotoxicity and IFNγ production). Recently, two studies using murine CMV (MCMV) have corroborated and extended these observations. In particular, they have illustrated the ability of adoptively transferred MCMV-induced γδ T cells to protect immune-deficient mice against virus-induced death. In vivo, expansion of γδ T cells is associated with the clearance of CMV infection as well as with reduced cancer occurrence or leukemia relapse risk in kidney transplant patients and allogeneic stem cell recipients, respectively. Taken together, all these studies show that γδ T cells are important immune effectors against CMV and cancer, which are life-threatening diseases affecting transplant recipients. The ability of CMV-induced γδ T cells to act independently of other immune cells opens the door to the development of novel cellular immunotherapies that could be particularly beneficial for immunocompromised transplant recipients.

Highlights

  • Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) belong to the betaherpesvirus family and infect different species including rodents, non-human primates, and humans

  • Human and murine CMV (MCMV) share many biological properties: (i) they present comparable structures and some viral proteins are homologous between human and mouse [1, 2]; (ii) they show similar tissue tropism [3, 4]; (iii) they induce similar pathologies in immunocompromised hosts [5,6,7,8,9], justifying MCMV infection of mice a widely used in vivo model to study CMV pathogenesis and antiviral immunity

  • Memory inflation was primary described in BALB/c mice by Holtappels et al, who showed an enrichment of CD62L− CD8+ T cells specific to IE1 (m123/pp89), during latent MCMV infection in the lungs [57]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) belong to the betaherpesvirus family and infect different species including rodents, non-human primates, and humans. The mechanism controlling the exit from CMV latency depends on both the differentiation status of the latently infected cells, and on the immune status of the host. Before focusing on γδ T cells, we will provide a quick overview of the NK and CD8+ αβ T cell responses to CMV in humans and mice.

COMPETENT MICE
HCMV INFECTION
LATENT CMV INFECTION AND LONGTERM ANTIVIRAL NK CELL RESPONSE
RESPONSE OF γδ T CELLS TO HCMV
EVIDENCING THE PROTECTIVE
HOW DO γδ T CELLS CONTROL CMV INFECTION?
Findings
CLINICAL INTEREST OF γδ T CELL RESPONSE TO CMV
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