Evading the immune system

A protein from human cytomegalovirus interacts with HLA-I molecules to prevent the immune system from detecting infected cells.

Human natural killer cell. Image credit: NIAID via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)

During a viral infection, the immune system must discriminate between healthy and infected cells to selectively kill infected cells. Healthy cells have different types of molecules known collectively as HLA-I on their surface. These molecules present small fragments of proteins from the cell, called antigens, to patrolling immune cells, known as CTLs or natural killer cells.

While CTLs ignore antigens from human proteins (which indicate the cell is healthy), they can bind to and recognize antigens from viral proteins, which triggers them to activate immune responses that kill the infected cell. However, some viruses can prevent infected cells from presenting HLA-I molecules on their surfaces as a strategy to evade the immune system. Natural killer cells have evolved to overcome this challenge. They bind to the HLA-I molecules themselves, which causes them to remain inactive. However, if the HLA-I molecules are missing, the NK cells can more easily switch on and kill the target cell.

The human cytomegalovirus is a common virus that causes lifelong infection in humans. Although it rarely causes illness in healthy individuals, it can be life-threatening to newborn babies and for individuals with weakened immune systems. One human cytomegalovirus protein known as US10 was previously found to bind to HLA-I without reducing the levels of these molecules on the surface of the cell. However, its precise role remained unclear.

Gerke et al. used several biochemical and cell biology approaches to investigate whether US10 manipulates the quality of the three types of HLA-I, which could impact both CTL and NK cell recognition. The experiments showed that US10 acted differently on the various kinds of HLA-I. To one type, it bound strongly within the cell and prevented it from reaching the surface. US10 also prevented another type of HLA-I from maturing properly and presenting antigens but did not affect the third type of HLA-I.

These findings suggest that US10 interferes with the ability of different HLA-I types to present antigens in specific ways. Further research is needed to measure how US10 activity affects immune cells, which may ultimately aid the development of new therapies against human cytomegalovirus and other similar viruses.