Background & Aims: Down-regulation of hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD4+ T-cell responses is a hallmark of chronic viral persistence in acute hepatitis C. FOXP3+CD25+CD4+ regulatory T cells can modulate HCV-specific immune responses in vitro, but the role of virus-specific regulatory T cells in the pathogenesis of chronic viral persistence is unknown. Methods: Two novel HLA-DR15 tetramers were synthesized to study the kinetics and phenotype of FOXP3+-expressing HCV-specific CD4+ T cells from 10 patients with acute hepatitis C and 15 patients with chronic hepatitis C. Results: In acute hepatitis C, generally only a low percentage of HCV-specific CD4+ T cells expressed FOXP3+ (mean of 2.5% in patients with self-limited acute hepatitis C vs 2.4% in patients with evolving chronic hepatitis C). Although distinct but short-lived increases in virus-specific FOXP3+CD4+ T cells occurred in 3 patients (30%, 26%, and 7% of tet+ CD4+ T cells, respectively), these did not correlate with the evolution of chronic hepatitis C. HCV-specific FOXP3+CD4+ T cells displayed a distinct phenotype, with only 10% expressing CD25 and 40% being CD127low. Interestingly, this phenotype of FOXP3+CD4+ T cells was already expanded in bulk CD4+ T cells in patients with chronic hepatitis C. Conclusions: Although short-lived increases in HCV-specific FOXP3+CD4+ T cells occur during the course of acute hepatitis C, we could not demonstrate an association of HCV-specific regulatory T cells and persistent viremia. © 2009 AGA Institute.
CITATION STYLE
Heeg, M. H. J., Ulsenheimer, A., Grüner, N. H., Zachoval, R., Jung, M. C., Gerlach, J. T., … Diepolder, H. M. (2009). FOXP3 Expression in Hepatitis C Virus-Specific CD4+ T Cells During Acute Hepatitis C. Gastroenterology, 137(4). https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2009.06.059
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