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Document Description
Title
Intrahepatic
innate
immunity
in
hepadnaviral
infection
in the
woodchuck
model
of
hepatitis
B
Author
Guy
,
Clifford
Scott
,
1976-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2008.
Medicine
Date
2008
Pagination
xvii, 264 leaves : ill.
Subject
Cell-mediated
cytotoxicity;
Hepatitis
B--Immunological
aspects;
Liver
cells;
Woodchuck--Diseases;
Subject.MESH
Hepatitis
B--immunology;
Kupffer
Cells;
Marmota
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Medicine
Discipline
Medicine
Language
Eng
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
225-256)
Abstract
Hepatitis
B
virus
(HBV)
causes
lifelong
chronic
liver
disease
in
approximately
400
million
people
worldwide.
The
causative
factors
underlying
resolution
of
HBV
infection
and the
development
of
chronic
hepatitis
B
are not
completely
understood
,
although
an
inadequate
anti-viral
immune
response
is
considered
to be
important
in
establishing
chronic
symptomatic
infection.
In this
regard
,
previous
studies
have
demonstrated
the
significance
of
broad
strong
innate
and
anti-HBV
adaptive
immune
responses
in
inhibition
of
hepadnaviral
replication
and
resolution
of
acute
hepatitis.
--
The
contribution
of the
liver
to
induction
and
maintenance
of
peripheral
immune
tolerance
or to
decreased
immune
responsiveness
is
increasingly
recognized.
These
functions
may
in
part
be
ascribed
to the
unique
cellular
composition
of the
liver
,
including
a
disproportionately
high
number
of
innate
immune
cell
subsets
and
specialized
antigen
presenting
cells.
Liver
cells
,
including
hepatocytes
, also
appear
to
contribute
to the
immune
response
by
interacting
with
naïve
or
activated
T
cells.
--
We
hypothesized
that
hepatocytes
can
act
as
effector
immune
cells
and they
can
directly
shape
hepatic
immune
responses
and that the
natural
tolerizing
properties
of the
liver
may
contribute
to an
impaired
effectiveness
of the
anti-viral
response
in
hepadnaviral
infection.
To
investigate
these
possibilities
,
we
utilized
experimental
hepadnaviral
infection
in
woodchucks
infected
with
woodchuck
hepatitis
virus
(WHV)
,
which
represents
the
closest
virological
and
pathogenic
model
of
human
HBV
infection
and
hepatitis
B.
--
In the
first
study
,
we
discovered
that
normal
hepatocytes
constitutively
express
CD95
ligand
(CD95L)
and
can
cause
death
of
contacted
cells
via
a
CD95L-CD95-dependent
mechanism.
Furthermore
,
interferon-gamma
(IFNy)
and
, to a
lesser
extent
,
tumour
necrosis
factor-alpha
(TNFa)
can
enhance
hepatocyte
CD95L-mediated
cytotoxicity.
This
suggests
that the
local
cytokine
environment
may
modulate
the
contribution
of
hepatocytes
to
liver
immunity.
Subsequently
,
we
discovered
that
hepatocytes
also
express
biologically
competent
perforin
capable
of
cell
killing.
The
ability
of
hepatocytes
to
cause
cell
death
by
two
different
but
complementary
mechanisms
,
differentially
regulated
by the
cytokine
microenvironment
,
emphasized
the
role
of
hepatocytes
as
cytotoxic
effectors
while
demonstrating
for the
first
time
that
perforin
is
expressed
by
non-immune
cells.
--
Further
investigations
revealed
that
hepatocyte
CD95L
and
perforin-mediated
cytotoxicity
is
significantly
augmented
during
chronic
hepadnaviral
hepatitis
and
following
recovery
from
acute
infection.
This
could
be a
consequence
of
increased
intrahepatic
production
of
IFNy
due
to
virus-induced
liver
inflammation
and
strengthens
the
possibility
that
hepatocytes
may
actively
contribute
to
shaping
the
local
immune
environment
in
hepadnaviral
infection.
On the
other
hand
, a
direct
contribution
of
WHV
to
augmented
hepatocyte
cytotoxicity
was
excluded
in a
series
of in
vitro
experiments
applying
woodchuck
hepatocyte
lines
stably
expressing
WHV
genome
or its
individual
genes.
--
In a
final
study
,
quantitative
analyses
of
intrahepatic
hepadnaviral
replication
and
molecular
markers
indicative
of
activation
of
innate
and
adaptive
immune
responses
,
using
real-time
RT-PCR
assays
,
revealed
that
hepadnavirus
establishes
replication
almost
immediately
following
exposure
to a
large
,
liver
pathogenic
virus
dose
and that the
innate
response
is
promptly
activated.
However
, this
response
appears
to be
insufficient
in
priming
an
effective
adaptive
T
cell
response
capable
of
early
virus
elimination.
These
findings
indicate
that
, in
contrast
to
observations
in
HBV-infected
chimpanzees
,
hepadnavirus
is
recognized
immediately
after
invasion
by the
hepatic
innate
immune
system.
--
Taken
together
,
hepatocytes
constitutively
display
cytotoxic
capabilities
which
are
susceptible
to
cytokine-induced
augmentation.
Hypothetically
, this
hepatic
local
cytotoxic
activity
may
constrain
priming
of
adaptive
T
cells
by
activated
innate
immune
effectors
due
to
deletion
of
virus-specific
T
cells.
This
paradigm
would
favour
the
expansion
of
virus
replication
in the
liver
during
the
prolonged
incubation
period
typically
seen
in
hepadnaviral
infection
,
prior
to the
extrahepatic
development
of
effective
antiviral
T
cell
responses
capable
of
resolution
of
acute
hepatitis.
The
relevance
of this
paradigm
to the
establishment
of
chronic
hepadnaviral
hepatitis
will
require
further
investigation.
Type
Text
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a2562089
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(28.11
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Guy_CliffordScott.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
136479.cpd