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Bystander activated CD8 + T cells mediate neuropathology during viral infection via antigen-independent cytotoxicity.

Elizabeth BalintEmily FengElizabeth C GilesTyrah M RitchieAlexander S QianFatemeh VahediAmelia MontemaranoAna L PortilloJonathan K MonteiroBernardo L TrigattiAli A Ashkar
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Although many viral infections are linked to the development of neurological disorders, the mechanism governing virus-induced neuropathology remains poorly understood, particularly when the virus is not directly neuropathic. Using a mouse model of Zika virus (ZIKV) infection, we found that the severity of neurological disease did not correlate with brain ZIKV titers, but rather with infiltration of bystander activated NKG2D + CD8 + T cells. Antibody depletion of CD8 or blockade of NKG2D prevented ZIKV-associated paralysis, suggesting that CD8 + T cells induce neurological disease independent of TCR signaling. Furthermore, spleen and brain CD8 + T cells exhibited antigen-independent cytotoxicity that correlated with NKG2D expression. Finally, viral infection and inflammation in the brain was necessary but not sufficient to induce neurological damage. We demonstrate that CD8 + T cells mediate virus-induced neuropathology via antigen-independent, NKG2D-mediated cytotoxicity, which may serve as a therapeutic target for treatment of virus-induced neurological disease.
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