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Characterization of Human CD8 T Cell Responses in Dengue Virus-Infected Patients from India.

Anmol ChandeleJaturong SewatanonSivaram GunisettyMohit SinglaNattawat OnlamoonRama S AkondyHaydn Thomas KissickKaustuv NayakElluri Seetharami ReddyHaroon KalamDhiraj KumarAnil VermaHareKrushna PandaSiyu WangNasikarn AngkasekwinaiKovit PattanapanyasatKulkanya ChokephaibulkitGuruprasad R MedigeshiRakesh LodhaSushil KabraRafi AhmedKaja Murali-Krishna
Published in: Journal of virology (2016)
Dengue is becoming a global public health concern. Although CD8 T cells have been implicated both in protection and in the cytokine-mediated immunopathology of dengue, how the balance is maintained between these opposing functions remains unknown. We comprehensively characterized CD8 T cell subsets in dengue patients from India and Thailand and show that these cells expand massively and express phenotypes indicative of overwhelming antigenic stimulus and tissue homing/cytotoxic-effector functions but that a vast majority of them fail to produce IFN-γ in vitro Interestingly, the cells were fully capable of producing the cytokine when stimulated in a T cell receptor (TCR)-independent manner but failed to do so in TCR-dependent stimulation. These results, together with transcriptomics, revealed that the vast majority of these CD8 T cells from dengue patients become cytokine unresponsive due to TCR signaling insufficiencies. These observations open novel avenues for understanding the mechanisms that fine-tune the balance between CD8-mediated protective versus pathological effects.
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