[HTML][HTML] Cross-reactive influenza virus–specific CD8+ T cells contribute to lymphoproliferation in Epstein-Barr virus–associated infectious mononucleosis

SC Clute, LB Watkin, M Cornberg… - The Journal of …, 2005 - Am Soc Clin Investig
SC Clute, LB Watkin, M Cornberg, YN Naumov, JL Sullivan, K Luzuriaga, RM Welsh
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2005Am Soc Clin Investig
The marked proliferation of activated CD8+ T cells is pathognomonic of EBV-associated
infectious mononucleosis (IM), common in young adults. Since the diversity and size of the
memory CD8+ T cell population increase with age, we questioned whether IM was mediated
by the reactivation of memory CD8+ T cells specific to previously encountered pathogens
but cross-reactive with EBV. Of 8 HLA-A2+ IM patients, 5 had activated T cells specific to
another common virus, as evidenced by a significantly higher number of peripheral blood …
The marked proliferation of activated CD8+ T cells is pathognomonic of EBV-associated infectious mononucleosis (IM), common in young adults. Since the diversity and size of the memory CD8+ T cell population increase with age, we questioned whether IM was mediated by the reactivation of memory CD8+ T cells specific to previously encountered pathogens but cross-reactive with EBV. Of 8 HLA-A2+ IM patients, 5 had activated T cells specific to another common virus, as evidenced by a significantly higher number of peripheral blood influenza A virus M158–66–specific T cells compared with healthy immune donors. Two patients with an augmented M1 response had tetramer-defined cross-reactive cells recognizing influenza M1 and EBV-BMLF1280–288, which accounted for up to one-third of their BMLF1-specific population and likely contributed to a skewed M1-specific T cell receptor repertoire. These epitopes, with only 33% sequence similarity, mediated differential effects on the function of the cross-reactive T cells, which may contribute to alterations in disease outcome. EBV could potentially encode an extensive pool of T cell epitopes that activate other cross-reactive memory T cells. Our results support the concept that cross-reactive memory CD8+ T cells activated by EBV contribute to the characteristic lymphoproliferation of IM.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation