Abstract

BackgroundCTL escape mutations have been described during acute hepatitis C in patients who developed chronic disease later on. Our aim was to investigate the mutual relationship between HCV specific CD8+ T cells and evolution of the viral sequence during early acute HCV infection.ResultsWe sequenced multiple clones of NS3 1406 epitope in 4 HLA-A*02 patients with acute hepatitis C genotype 1b infection. Pentamers specific for the variants were used to monitor the corresponding CD8+ T cell response. We observed outgrowth of mutations, which induced only a weak and thus potentially insufficient CD8+ T cell response. In one patient we observed outgrowth of variant epitopes with similarities to a different genotype rather than de novo mutations most probably due to a lack of responsiveness to these likely pre-existing variants. We could show that in acute hepatitis C CTL escape mutations occur much earlier than demonstrated in previous studies.ConclusionsThe adaption of the virus to a new host is characterized by a high and rapid variability in epitopes under CD8+ T cell immune pressure. This adaption takes place during the very early phase of acute infection and strikingly some sequences were reduced below the limit of detection at some time points but were detected at high frequency again at later time points. Independent of the observed variability, HCV-specific CD8+ T cell responses decline and no adaption to different or new antigens during the course of infection could be detected.

Highlights

  • CTL escape mutations have been described during acute hepatitis C in patients who developed chronic disease later on

  • We focused on the well-characterized CD8 T-cell epitope NS3 1406–15 with HLA-A0201* restriction, which has already been described in the context of escape mutations [4,11]

  • This relative proportion of these variant-specific CD8+ T cells remained unchanged during the course of disease despite a high fluctuation of sequences and viral load found at the different time points (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

CTL escape mutations have been described during acute hepatitis C in patients who developed chronic disease later on. Several studies in the chimpanzee model were able to analyze very early viral evolution in acute HCV infection and found a correlation between outgrowth of escape mutations and the clinical outcome [9,10]. These studies constitute a critical mass of evidence for CTL escape mutations in HCV infection many questions, including timing, variability and whether these sequence changes represent outgrowth of particular clones of pre-existing quasi species or de novo mutations, remain to be answered

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