A superantigen interacts with leishmanial infection in antigen-presenting cells to regulate cytokine commitment of responding CD4 T cells

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Abstract

Germ-line retroviral insertions in vertebrate genomes are implicated in the modulation of host immune responses. We demonstrate that CBA/J mice, which carry the proviral integrants mammary tumor virus locus 6 (Mtv6) and mammary tumor virus locus 7 (Mtv7), are less resistant to infection with the protozoan pathogen Leishmania major compared with closely related but Mtv6-negative and Mtv7-negative CBA/CaJ mice. Although both strains generated comparable L. major-specific CD4 T cell frequencies, T cells from CBA/J mice made much less interferon γ (IFN-γ). L. major-infected CBA/CaJ dendritic cells primed L. major-specific and allospecific IFN-γ-producing CD4 T cells better in vivo and in vitro, respectively, than CBA/J dendritic cells did. L. major susceptibility appeared to be associated with Mtv7, and v-Sag-7 superantigen expression and L. major infection together reduced the ability of an antigen-presenting cell line to prime alloresponder CD4 T cells for IFN-γ commitment. These data show that an endogenous superantigen can interact with L. major infection to alter antigen-presenting cell properties and modulate T cell cytokine commitment, with implications for human susceptibility to infectious diseases. © 2010 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Varanasi, V., Mattoo, H., Tupperwar, N. C., Thyagarajan, K., Das, A., Kumar, R., … Rath, S. (2010). A superantigen interacts with leishmanial infection in antigen-presenting cells to regulate cytokine commitment of responding CD4 T cells. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 202(8), 1234–1245. https://doi.org/10.1086/656366

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