Title | Respiratory syncytial virus induces phosphorylation of mTOR at ser2448 in CD8 T cells from nasal washes of infected infants. | ||
Author | de Souza, A P Duarte; de Freitas, D Nascimento; Antuntes Fernandes, K E; D'Avila da Cunha, M; Antunes Fernandes, J L; Benetti Gassen, R; Fazolo, T; Pinto, L A; Scotta, M; Mattiello, R; Pitrez, P M; Bonorino, C; Stein, R T | ||
Journal | Clin Exp Immunol | Publication Year/Month | 2016-Feb |
PMID | 26437614 | PMCID | PMC4711155 |
Affiliation + expend | 1.Laboratorio De Imunologia Clinica E Experimental, Pontificia Universidade Catolica Do Rio Grande Do Sul (PUCRS), Porto Alegre, Brazil. |
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-specific CD8(+) T cell responses do not protect against reinfection. Activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) impairs memory CD8(+) T cell differentiation. Our hypothesis was that RSV inhibits the formation of CD8(+) T cells memory responses through mTOR activation. To explore this, human and mouse T cells were used. RSV induced mTOR phosphorylation at Ser2448 in CD8 T cells. mTOR activation by RSV was completely inhibited using rapamycin. RSV-infected children presented higher mTOR gene expression on nasal washes comparing to children infected with metapneumovirus and rhinovirus. In addition, RSV-infected infants presented a higher frequency of CD8(+) pmTORser2448(+) T cells in nasal washes compared to RSV-negative infants. Rapamycin treatment increased the frequency of mouse CD8 RSV-M282-90 pentamer-positive T cells and the frequency of RSV-specific memory T cells precursors. These data demonstrate that RSV is activating mTOR directly in CD8 T cells, indicating a role for mTOR during the course of RSV infection.