Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is the most frequent viral cause of congenital defects and can trigger devastating disease in immune-suppressed patients. Cytotoxic lymphocytes (CD8+ T cells and NK cells) control HCMV infection by releasing interferon-γ and five granzymes (GrA, GrB, GrH, GrK, GrM), which are believed to kill infected host cells through cleavage of intracellular death substrates. However, it has recently been demonstrated that the in vivo killing capacity of cytotoxic T cells is limited and multiple T cell hits are required to kill a single virus-infected cell. This raises the question whether cytotoxic lymphocytes can use granzymes to control HCMV infection in a noncytotoxic manner. Here, we demonstrate that (primary) cytotoxic lymphocytes can block HCMV dissemination independent of host cell death, and interferon-α/β/γ. Prior to killing, cytotoxic lymphocytes induce the degradation of viral immediate-early (IE) proteins IE1 and IE2 in HCMV-infected cells. Intriguingly, both IE1 and/or IE2 are directly proteolyzed by all human granzymes, with GrB and GrM being most efficient. GrB and GrM cleave IE1 after Asp398 and Leu414, respectively, likely resulting in IE1 aberrant cellular localization, IE1 instability, and functional impairment of IE1 to interfere with the JAK-STAT signaling pathway. Furthermore, GrB and GrM cleave IE2 after Asp184 and Leu173, respectively, resulting in IE2 aberrant cellular localization and functional abolishment of IE2 to transactivate the HCMV UL112 early promoter. Taken together, our data indicate that cytotoxic lymphocytes can also employ noncytotoxic ways to control HCMV infection, which may be explained by granzyme-mediated targeting of indispensable viral proteins during lytic infection.

Highlights

  • Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a member of the beta-herpesviridae family with worldwide seroprevalence of up to 90% [1]

  • The killing capacity of cytotoxic cells is limited and multiple T cell hits are required to kill a single virus-infected cell. This raises the question whether cytotoxic lymphocytes can use granzymes to control HCMV infection in a noncytotoxic manner

  • We show that cytotoxic lymphocytes can use granzymes to inhibit HCMV replication in absence of cell death

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Summary

Introduction

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a member of the beta-herpesviridae family with worldwide seroprevalence of up to 90% [1]. It is the most frequent viral cause of congenital defects and HCMV may promote tumor development [1, 2]. Primary infection induces a life-long latent infection, in bone marrow-resident precursor cells of the myeloid lineage (CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells), amongst others [3] Differentiation of these latently infected myeloid precursors into migrating macrophages or mature dendritic cells is the proposed mechanism for viral organ dissemination and reactivation from latency [3]. No effective vaccine is available and anti-viral drugs are limited due to toxicity and emergence of drug-resistant virus [4, 5]

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