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Plasmacytoid dendritic cells respond to Epstein-Barr virus infection with a distinct type I interferon subtype profile

  • Cornelia Gujer
  • , Anita Murer
  • , Anne Müller
  • , Danusia Vanoaica
  • , Kathrin Sutter
  • , Emilie Jacque
  • , Nathalie Fournier
  • , Jens Kalchschmidt
  • , Andrea Zbinden
  • , Riccarda Capaul
  • , Andrzej Dzionek
  • , Philippe Mondon
  • , Ulf Dittmer
  • , Christian Münz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Scopus citations

Abstract

Infectious mononucleosis, caused by infection with the human gamma-herpesvirus Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), manifests with one of the strongest CD81 T-cell responses described in humans. The resulting T-cell memory response controls EBV infection asymptomatically in the vast majority of persistently infected individuals. Whether and how dendritic cells (DCs) contribute to the priming of this near-perfect immune control remains unclear. Here we show that of all the human DC subsets, plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) play a central role in the detection of EBV infection in vitro and in mice with reconstituted human immune system components. pDCs respond to EBV by producing the interferon (IFN) subtypes a1, a2, a5, a7, a14, and a17. However, the virus curtails this type I IFN production with its latent EBV gene products EBNA3A and EBNA3C. The induced type I IFNs inhibit EBV entry and the proliferation of latently EBV-transformed B cells but do not influence lytic reactivation of the virus in vitro. In vivo, exogenous IFN-a14 and IFN-a17, as well as pDC expansion, delay EBV infection and the resulting CD81 T-cell expansion, but pDC depletion does not significantly influence EBV infection. Thus, consistent with the observation that primary immunodeficiencies compromising type I IFN responses affect only alpha- and beta-herpesvirus infections, we found that EBV elicits pDC responses that transiently suppress viral replication and attenuate CD81 T-cell expansion but are not required to control primary infection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1129-1144
Number of pages16
JournalBlood advances
Volume3
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Apr 2019
Externally publishedYes

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