Intestinal tuft cell immune privilege enables norovirus persistence

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Abstract

The persistent murine norovirus strain MNVCR6 is a model for human norovirus and enteric viral persistence. MNVCR6 causes chronic infection by directly infecting intestinal tuft cells, rare chemosensory epithelial cells. Although MNVCR6 induces functional MNV-specific CD8+ T cells, these lymphocytes fail to clear infection. To examine how tuft cells promote immune escape, we interrogated tuft cell interactions with CD8+ T cells by adoptively transferring JEDI (just EGFP death inducing) CD8+ T cells into Gfi1b-GFP tuft cell reporter mice. Unexpectedly, some intestinal tuft cells partially resisted JEDI CD8+ T cell–mediated killing—unlike Lgr5+ intestinal stem cells and extraintestinal tuft cells—despite seemingly normal antigen presentation. When targeting intestinal tuft cells, JEDI CD8+ T cells predominantly adopted a T resident memory phenotype with decreased effector and cytotoxic capacity, enabling tuft cell survival. JEDI CD8+ T cells neither cleared nor prevented MNVCR6 infection in the colon, the site of viral persistence, despite targeting a virus-independent antigen. Ultimately, we show that intestinal tuft cells are relatively resistant to CD8+ T cells independent of norovirus infection, representing an immune-privileged niche that can be leveraged by enteric microbes.

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APA

Strine, M. S., Fagerberg, E., Darcy, P. W., Barrón, G. M., Filler, R. B., Alfajaro, M. M., … Wilen, C. B. (2024). Intestinal tuft cell immune privilege enables norovirus persistence. Science Immunology, 9(93). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.adi7038

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