On the impact of hepatitis C virus and heterologous immunity on alloimmune responses following liver transplantation |
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Authors: | Elliot Merritt Maria-Carlota Londoño Kate Childs Gavin Whitehouse Elisavet Kodela Alberto Sánchez-Fueyo Marc Martínez-Llordella |
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Affiliation: | MRC Centre for Transplantation, Department of Inflammation Biology, Faculty e Sciences & Medicine, Institute of Liver Studies, King’s College London, London, UK |
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Abstract: | Virus-induced heterologous immunity is considered a barrier to transplantation tolerance. Yet, hepatitis C (HCV)-infected liver transplant (LT) patients occasionally achieve operational tolerance. We investigated the mechanisms through which HCV infection modulates donor-specific T cell responses following LT and the influence of HCV eradication. We generated T cell lines from HCV-infected LT and non-LT patients before and after HCV eradication and quantified alloreactive responses using cell lines expressing single-HLA class-I antigens in the presence/absence of PD-1/CTLA-4 blockade. HCV-specific CD8+ T cells cross-reacted with allogeneic class-I HLA molecules. HCV-positive LT recipients exhibited a higher proportion of CD8+ T cells coexpressing inhibitory receptors (PD-1/CTLA4) than HCV-negative LT, and their expression correlated with CXCL10 plasma levels. This resulted in decreased antidonor and third-party proliferative responses, which were significantly reversed by HCV eradication. PD-1/CTLA-4 blockade increased the proportion of HCV-specific CD8+ T cells reacting against donor only before viral clearance. In conclusion, HCV infection results in the generation of HCV-specific CD8+ T cells capable of reacting against allogeneic HLA molecules. Following LT, this results in a PD-1/CTLA4-dependent decrease in alloimmune responses. Our findings challenge the notion that heterologous immunity is necessarily detrimental in LT and provide an explanation for the association between HCV eradication and immune-mediated allograft damage. |
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Keywords: | alloantigen basic (laboratory) research/science cell death: exhaustion immune regulation immunosuppression/immune modulation infection and infectious agents – viral: hepatitis C infectious disease liver allograft function/dysfunction liver transplantation/hepatology translational research/science |
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