HCMV

Many of us are infected with a virus we鈥檒l never clear. While we鈥檙e healthy, it鈥檚 nothing to worry about, but when our immune system is suppressed it could kill us.

探花直播virus is deliberately trying to evade the immune system by manipulating it

Mark Wills

To catch the herpes virus human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) you must be exposed to someone who has it. This isn鈥檛 difficult: it is carried by around 65% of the population. Once in the body, HCMV persists for life owing to its clever ability to avoid our immune system and to go into hiding inside our cells in a latent state. Now, research is identifying changes in these cells that could lead to a new route to eradicating the virus.

鈥淗CMV can be acquired very early in childhood, and the number of people infected gradually rises throughout life,鈥 said Professor John Sinclair, a molecular virologist in the Department of Medicine. 鈥 探花直播active virus can not only be passed from an infected mother to her child in breast milk but can easily be transferred from child to child in saliva 鈥 one child puts a toy in their mouth, then it鈥檚 passed to another child who does the same, and the virus is passed on. It鈥檚 also a sexually transmitted disease, so there鈥檚 another increase in infections when people become sexually mature.鈥

Once acquired, the virus goes into a latent state in the body. If it reactivates in healthy people, their immune responses prevent it from causing disease. But when the immune system is suppressed, active HCMV becomes dangerous. It is a major cause of illness and death in organ and bone marrow transplant patients, who are given drugs to deliberately suppress their immune system and prevent their body rejecting the transplant. With an increasing demand for transplants in the UK, HCMV is set to become a growing problem.

鈥淚f it鈥檚 not treated well, or it develops resistance to antiviral drugs, HCMV can lead to pneumonitis 鈥 inflammation of the lung tissue 鈥 and, in the most extreme case, it replicates all over the body and the patient ends up with multiple organ failure,鈥 said Dr Mark Wills, a viral immunologist working alongside Sinclair in the Department of Medicine.

鈥淭issue from donors carrying the virus often has to be used for transplants because there are so few donors and so many people carrying the virus,鈥 said Sinclair. 鈥淏y transplanting bone marrow, or an organ from someone with the infection, you鈥檙e giving the patient the virus and you鈥檙e immune-suppressing them. That鈥檚 the worst of both worlds.鈥

And HCMV is not a worry just for transplant patients. 鈥淗CMV is now the leading cause of infectious congenital disease 鈥 that is, disease present at birth,鈥 said Sinclair. Women in early pregnancy who are newly infected with HCMV or whose HCMV reactivates are at real risk, and this can lead to disease in their unborn baby. HCMV also targets HIV-AIDS patients, where a progressive failure of the immune system allows this opportunistic infection to thrive.

There is no vaccine to prevent HCMV infection, and the antiviral drugs available to treat it have significant toxicity and only limited effectiveness. In addition to the problem of viral resistance, drugs can only target HCMV in its active state, which means the virus can never be fully eradicated. 鈥淵ou can suppress the virus down to a very low level, but you can never get rid of the latent reservoir with the currently available antiviral drugs,鈥 said Wills.

Sinclair and Wills, who have just received their fifth consecutive five-year grant from the Medical Research Council (MRC), have focused on understanding how the virus maintains this latent infection in specialised cells of the immune system and how the immune system is prevented from eliminating the virus from the body.

鈥 探花直播belief has always been that, in its latent state, HCMV was just sitting there doing nothing, waiting to reactivate,鈥 said Sinclair. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e started to identify major changes in latently infected cells, and we think these are targetable with novel drugs and immunotherapies.

鈥淥ne change is in a transporter protein normally used by the cell to pump out things it needs to get rid of,鈥 he added. 鈥淚f you put the chemotherapy drug vincristine on a healthy cell, the cell will pump it out and survive. Working with Paul Lehner at the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research we found that, during latent infection, this transporter protein is less effective, making the cell more prone to killing by vincristine.鈥 Their results were published in Science in April 2013.

鈥淚n addition to treatment with drugs, we鈥檙e looking into immunotherapies 鈥 treatments based on using the patient鈥檚 immune system,鈥 said Wills. 鈥淐learly, the difficulty is that all healthy people have very good immune responses to the virus, yet we all still carry it and can never get rid of it. There must be a problem here 鈥 the virus is deliberately trying to evade the immune system by manipulating it.鈥

Sinclair and Wills are trying to understand how the virus does this while in its latent state. Their findings show that HCMV disrupts the proper activation of the immune system by manipulating small signalling molecules called cytokines and chemokines, which normally help to kick-start the process of removing a foreign invader. 鈥淣ow we know this, we can start to think about intervening,鈥 said Wills.

鈥淲e鈥檝e also found that latently infected cells are producing a number of viral proteins,鈥 added Wills. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a dangerous strategy for the virus, because these proteins could be presented on the surface of the cells they鈥檙e hiding in, which would attract immune cells like T cells to kill them. Our initial research showed that there are T-cell responses 鈥 so why aren鈥檛 the viral cells being eliminated? It鈥檚 paradoxical.鈥 In further investigations, they uncovered another mechanism in which the virus was promoting a certain subtype of T cell that suppresses the immune system. 鈥淪o now we鈥檙e working to remove the immunosuppressive component of that immune response by either removing or neutralising the function of the immunosuppressive T-cell subtype, to enable the other components of the body鈥檚 immune response to target the infected cells,鈥 added Wills.

By targeting latent infection, this work holds great promise for developing better methods of treatment for HCMV and for the design of a vaccine. 鈥淚f you intervene just before a transplant, and use this immunotherapeutic technique to target the latently infected cells, in combination with the drugs, you can purge the infected cells,鈥 said Sinclair. 鈥淭his massively reduces the potential that HCMV will reactivate in the person receiving the transplant, because effectively you鈥檙e not giving them the virus,鈥 he added.

They have proved this concept in the laboratory and their new MRC grant will enable them to trial its effectiveness in a model system as a stepping stone to human clinical trials. 鈥淎 decade ago we couldn鈥檛 have even contemplated doing this type of work,鈥 said Sinclair, 鈥渂ut now we have worked out what鈥檚 going on during latent infection, we can try to target these changes. Being able to clear the latent infection is key to eradicating much of the disease caused by HCMV that we see in the clinic.鈥


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