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1.
Expert Rev Vaccines ; 6(3): 357-68, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17542751

ABSTRACT

CD4 T cells play a primary role in regulating immune responses to pathogenic organisms and to vaccines. Antigen-specific CD4 T cells provide cognate help to B cells, a requisite event for immunoglobulin switch and affinity maturation of B cells that produce neutralizing antibodies and also provide help to cytotoxic CD8 T cells, critical for their expansion and persistence as memory cells. Finally, CD4 T cells may participate directly in pathogen clearance via cell-mediated cytotoxicity or through production of cytokines. Understanding the role of CD4 T-cell immunity to viruses and other pathogens, as well as evaluation of the efficacy of vaccines, requires insight into the specificity of CD4 T cells. This review focuses on the events within antigen-presenting cells that focus CD4 T cells toward a limited number of peptide antigens within the pathogen or vaccine. The molecular events are discussed in light of the special challenges that the influenza virus poses, owing to the high degree of genetic variability, unpredictable pathogenicity and the repeated encounters that human populations face with this highly infectious pathogenic organism.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Viral/immunology , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Immunodominant Epitopes/immunology , Influenza Vaccines/immunology , Orthomyxoviridae/immunology , Humans
2.
J Virol ; 81(14): 7608-19, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17507491

ABSTRACT

The recent threat of an avian influenza pandemic has generated significant interest in enhancing our understanding of the events that dictate protective immunity to influenza and in generating vaccines that can induce heterosubtypic immunity. Although antigen-specific CD4 T cells are known to play a key role in protective immunity to influenza through the provision of help to B cells and CD8 T cells, little is known about the specificity and diversity of CD4 T cells elicited after infection, particularly those elicited in humans. In this study, we used HLA-DR transgenic mice to directly and comprehensively identify the specificities of hemagglutinin (HA)-specific CD4 T cells restricted to a human class II molecule that were elicited following intranasal infection with a strain of influenza virus that has been endemic in U.S. human populations for the last decade. Our results reveal a surprising degree of diversity among influenza virus-specific CD4 T cells. As many as 30 different peptides, spanning the entire HA protein, were recognized by CD4 T cells, including epitopes genetically conserved among H1, H2, and H5 influenza A viruses. We also compared three widely used major histocompatibility class II algorithms to predict HLA-DR binding peptides and found these as yet inadequate for identifying influenza virus-derived epitopes. The results of these studies offer key insights into the spectrum of peptides recognized by HLA-DR-restricted CD4 T cells that may be the focus of immune responses to infection or to experimental or clinical vaccines in humans.


Subject(s)
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , HLA-DR1 Antigen/physiology , Hemagglutinins, Viral/pharmacology , Orthomyxoviridae/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cell Line , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , HLA-DR1 Antigen/genetics , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
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