Protective and Pathological Roles of Virus-Specific and Bystander CD8+ T Cells in Herpetic Stromal Keratitis

  • Banerjee K
  • Biswas P
  • Kumaraguru U
  • et al.
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Abstract

Herpetic stromal keratitis (HSK), resulting from corneal HSV-1 infection, represents a T cell-mediated immunopathologic lesion. In T cell transgenic mice on a SCID or RAG knockout background, the T cells mediating lesions are unreactive to viral Ags. In these bystander models, animals develop ocular lesions but are unable to control infection. Transfer of HSV-immune cells into a CD8+ T cell bystander model resulted in clearance of virus from eyes, animals survived, and lesions developed to greater severity. However, the adoptively transferred CD8+ T cells were not evident in lesions, although they were readily detectable in the lymphoid tissues as well as in the peripheral and CNS. Our results indicate that viral-induced tissue damage can be caused by bystander cells, but these fail to control infection. Immune CD8+ T cells trigger clearance of virus from the eye, but this appears to result by the T cells acting at sites distal to the cornea. A case is made that CD8+ T cell control is expressed in the trigeminal ganglion, serving to curtail a source of virus to the cornea.

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APA

Banerjee, K., Biswas, P. S., Kumaraguru, U., Schoenberger, S. P., & Rouse, B. T. (2004). Protective and Pathological Roles of Virus-Specific and Bystander CD8+ T Cells in Herpetic Stromal Keratitis. The Journal of Immunology, 173(12), 7575–7583. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.173.12.7575

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