It has been reported that infectious mononucleosis (IM)-symptomatic primary Epstein-Barr virus infection produces a global down-regulation of interleukin-15 receptor-alpha (IL-15R alpha) on T cells and natural killer cells associated with a defective IL-15 responsiveness that lasts for many years after the disease episode. In contrast with these results, our data indicate that, in the T-cell compartment derived from remote IM subjects, there is no quantitative or qualitative defect in the expression of the IL-15R alpha chain and no deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15. We observed efficient signal transduction, survival, and proliferation even in response to low IL-15 concentrations. These data are relevant and shed new light on the immune long-term response in IM subjects because they contradict the hypothesis that defects in Epstein-Barr virus-host immune balance may be correlated with a long-lasting global deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15. (Blood. 2009;113:4541-4547)
EBV-associated mononucleosis does not induce long-term global deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15
Negrini S;
2009-01-01
Abstract
It has been reported that infectious mononucleosis (IM)-symptomatic primary Epstein-Barr virus infection produces a global down-regulation of interleukin-15 receptor-alpha (IL-15R alpha) on T cells and natural killer cells associated with a defective IL-15 responsiveness that lasts for many years after the disease episode. In contrast with these results, our data indicate that, in the T-cell compartment derived from remote IM subjects, there is no quantitative or qualitative defect in the expression of the IL-15R alpha chain and no deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15. We observed efficient signal transduction, survival, and proliferation even in response to low IL-15 concentrations. These data are relevant and shed new light on the immune long-term response in IM subjects because they contradict the hypothesis that defects in Epstein-Barr virus-host immune balance may be correlated with a long-lasting global deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15. (Blood. 2009;113:4541-4547)| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
EBV-associated mononucleosis does not induce long-term global deficit in T-cell responsiveness to IL-15.pdf
Accesso aperto
Tipo di file:
PDF EDITORIALE
Dimensione
1.11 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.11 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



