Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) primary infection and periodic reactivation of latent virus is generally well controlled by T-cell responses in healthy people. In older donors, overt HCMV disease is not generally seen despite the association of HCMV infection with increased risk of mortality. However, increases in HCMV DNA in urine of older people suggest that, although the immune response retains functionality, immunomodulation of the immune response due to lifelong viral carriage may alter its efficacy. Viral transcription is limited during latency to a handful of viral genes and there is both an IFNγ and cellular IL-10 CD4+ T-cell response to HCMV latency-associated proteins. Production of cIL-10 by HCMV-specific CD4+ T-cells is a candidate for aging-related immunomodulation. To address whether long-term carriage of HCMV changes the balance of cIL-10 and IFNγ-secreting T-cell populations, we recruited a large donor cohort aged 23–78 years and correlated T-cell responses to 11 HCMV proteins with age, HCMV IgG levels, latent HCMV load in CD14+ monocytes, and T-cell numbers in the blood. IFNγ responses by CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells to all HCMV proteins were detected, with no age-related increase in this cohort. IL-10-secreting CD4+ T cell responses were predominant to latency-associated proteins but did not increase with age. Quantification of HCMV genomes in CD14+ monocytes, a known site of latent HCMV carriage, did not reveal any increase in viral genome copies in older donors. Importantly, there was a significant positive correlation between the latent viral genome copy number and the breadth and magnitude of the IFNγ T-cell response to HCMV proteins. This study suggests in healthy aged donors that HCMV-specific changes in the T cell compartment were not affected by age and were effective, as viremia was a very rare event. Evidence from studies of unwell aged has shown HCMV to be an important comorbidity factor, surveillance of latent HCMV load and low-level viremia in blood and body fluids, alongside typical immunological measures and assessment of the antiviral capacity of the HCMV-specific immune cell function would be informative in determining if antiviral treatment of HCMV replication in the old maybe beneficial.

Highlights

  • A consequence of aging in the human population is a decline in immune function, often described as immune senescence, which includes a loss of adaptive immune cells and an increase in inflammatory cytokines resulting in dysregulation of the immune response [1]

  • To determine whether long-term carriage of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) alters the HCMV-specific T cell response, with respect to cytokine secretion or state of T cell differentiation, and whether any identified changes impact on latent HCMV viral carriage and/or levels of HCMV IgG, we designed an age cross-sectional study

  • Correlation of the levels of HCMV IgG (ISR) within HCMV seropositive (HCMV +ve) donors with age did not show a significant accumulation with age {Pearson r = 0.1012 [95% confidence interval (CI): −0.0923, 0.2873], p = 0.3043}

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Summary

Introduction

A consequence of aging in the human population is a decline in immune function, often described as immune senescence, which includes a loss of adaptive immune cells and an increase in inflammatory cytokines resulting in dysregulation of the immune response [1]. There is evidence from a number of studies that, after the age of 65 years, the age-associated loss of immune function results in individuals becoming more susceptible to infectious diseases as well as increased morbidity and mortality from autoimmune disorders [2, 3]. Analysis of a number of large population cohorts recruited for cancer, dementia, and nutritional studies in the UK and USA have shown a significant association between HCMV seropositivity and mortality from cardiovascular related disease [14,15,16,17,18]. A study measuring frailty in older people saw a positive association with inflammatory cytokines but not HCMV infection [22] perhaps consistent with studies that have shown that rises in inflammatory cytokines in the serum of older donors is not primarily driven by HCMV [23]

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