Abstract

To characterize the immunity developed by patients infected by chikungunya virus (CHIKV), we studied the intensity and specificity of CHIKV-specific T cells mediated responses in chronic and recovered patients at 12 to 24 months post-infection. T cells were challenged in vitro against CHIKV synthetic peptides covering the length of three viral proteins, capsid, E2 and nsP1 proteins as well as all inactivated virus particles. Cytokine production was assessed by ELISPOT and intracellular labeling. T cells producing IFN-γ were detected against CHIKV in 85% patient’s cells either by direct ELISPOT assay (69% of patients) or after expansion of memory T cells allowing the detection of both CD4 and CD8 specific-T cells in 16% additional cases. The IFN-γ response was mainly engaged in response to nsP1 or E2 (52% and 46% cases, respectively) but in only 27% cases against the capsid. The anti-E2 response represented half the magnitude of the total CHIKV IFN-γ production and was mainly directed against the C-terminal half part of the protein. Almost all patients had conserved a T cell specific response against CHIKV with a clear hierarchy of T cell responses (CD8 > CD4) engaged against E2 > nsP1 > capsid. More importantly, the intensity of responses was not significantly different between recovered and chronic patients. These findings constitute key elements to a better understanding of patient T cell immunoreactivity against CHIKV and argue against a possible defect of T cell immunoresponse in the chronicity post-CHIKV infection.

Highlights

  • Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a small enveloped alphavirus of the Togaviridae family

  • Rheumatoid psoriasis was diagnosed in 4 patients, 4 had rheumatoid arthritis, 2 with spondylarthritis, periostic apposition in 3 and gout arthropathy in 1 patient

  • We tested the specificity of six chronic and six recovered patient’s sera by Western blotting of CHIKV-infected C6/36 cell lysates

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Summary

Introduction

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a small enveloped alphavirus of the Togaviridae family. Like other alphaviruses, it is continuously maintained in nature by transmission cycles between mosquito’s vectors and vertebrate hosts including humans [1,2]. In 2005-2006, 266.000 clinical cases (about 1/3rd of the population) were reported in La Reunion Island, revealing exceptional forms of the CHIKV disease (CHIKVD) in a non-immune population, including severe complications in adults (persistent arthralgia, arthritis, neurological complications ), encephalitis in newborns and increasing human morbidity [8,9,10]. After 2-4 days of infection, the acute phase of CHIKVD symptoms is characterized by a sudden appearance of high fever, skin rash and painful arthralgia (>90% of cases) during 3-7 days, associated or not with other symptoms like myalgia, headache, edema or gastrointestinal disorders. Joint pains affecting wrists, elbows, toes, ankles and knees appears in a fluctuating manner but without changing anatomical location [2,11,12,13]

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