Abstract

Background: Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection is the most common infection acquired before birth and from which about 20% of infants develop permanent neurodevelopmental effects regardless of presence or absence of symptoms at birth. Viral escape from host immune control may be a mechanism of CMV transmission and infant disease severity. We sought to identify and compare CMV epitopes recognized by mother-infant pairs. We also hypothesized that if immune escape were occurring, then one pattern of longitudinal CD8 T cell responses restricted by shared HLA alleles would be maternal loss (by viral escape) and infant gain (by viral reversion to wildtype) of CMV epitope recognition.Methods: The study population consisted of 6 women with primary CMV infection during pregnancy and their infants with cCMV infection. CMV UL83 and UL123 peptides with known or predicted restriction by maternal MHC class I alleles were identified, and a subset was selected for testing based on several criteria. Maternal or infant cells were stimulated with CMV peptides in the IFN-γ ELISpot assay.Results: Overall, 14 of 25 (56%; 8 UL83 and 6 UL123) peptides recognized by mother-infant pairs were not previously reported as CD8 T cell epitopes. Of three pairs with longitudinal samples, one showed maternal loss and infant gain of responses to a CMV epitope restricted by a shared HLA allele.Conclusions: CD8 T cell responses to multiple novel CMV epitopes were identified, particularly in infants. Moreover, the hypothesized pattern of CMV immune escape was observed in one mother-infant pair. These findings emphasize that knowledge of paired CMV epitope recognition allows exploration of viral immune escape that may operate within the maternal-fetal system. Our work provides rationale for future studies of this potential mechanism of CMV transmission during pregnancy or clinical outcomes of infants with cCMV infection.

Highlights

  • Congenital cytomegalovirus infection is the most common infection acquired before birth, with an incidence of nearly 0.7% of live births in the United States [1]

  • Predicted to be CMV epitopes based on maternal human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles, a total of 28 UL83 or UL123 (IE1) peptides were tested for CD8 T cell responses in 6 mother-infant pairs, of which 25 (89%) elicited detectable responses in the overall cohort (Table 2)

  • We report results of a pilot study comparing CMV epitopespecific CD8 T cell responses in women with primary CMV infection during pregnancy and their infants with congenital infection

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Summary

Introduction

Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection is the most common infection acquired before birth, with an incidence of nearly 0.7% of live births in the United States [1]. CMV-specific CD8 T cells have been detected in fetuses as early as 22–28 weeks gestation [6, 8, 12], and were characterized by oligoclonal expansion and late differentiation phenotype similar to adults [6, 8]. While these responses can increase in frequency and breadth of CMV antigen recognition over time [8], their function may be suboptimal [10, 13]. We hypothesized that if immune escape were occurring, one pattern of longitudinal CD8 T cell responses restricted by shared HLA alleles would be maternal loss (by viral escape) and infant gain (by viral reversion to wildtype) of CMV epitope recognition

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