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LB1.5 Initial interactions of herpes simplex virus with human skin dendritic cells
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  1. M Kim1,2,
  2. NR Truong1,2,
  3. V James1,
  4. L Bosnjak1,
  5. KJ Sandgren1,2,
  6. AN Harman1,2,
  7. N Nasr1,2,
  8. KM Bertram1,2,
  9. N Olbourne3,
  10. S Sawleshwarkar4,
  11. K McKinnon4,
  12. RC Cohen5,
  13. AL Cunningham1,2
  1. 1Westmead Millennium Institute for Medical Research
  2. 2University of Sydney
  3. 3Sydney Institute of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
  4. 4Western Sydney Sexual Health Centre
  5. 5TheChildren’s Hospital at Westmead

Abstract

Introduction The mechanism by which immunity to herpes simplex virus (HSV) is initiated is not completely defined. HSV initially infects the stratified squamous epithelium of the anogenital mucosa prior to entering nerve endings. We have recently reported that topical application of HSV-1 to human foreskin explants results in infection of epidermal Langerhans cells (LCs) which then emigrate into the dermis where they expressed the maturation marker CD80 and formed large cell clusters with BDCA3+ subsets of DC-SIGN+ and dermal dendritic cells (DCs) and. HSV-expressing LC fragments were observed inside the dermal DCs/macrophages. No other infected epidermal cells interacted with the dermal DCs (Kim et al. Plos Pathogens, 2015).

Methods Therefore, we isolated LCs and dermal DCs from large abdominal skin specimens by collagenase digestion and flow sorting. LCs were pulsed with fluorescent tagged HSV and co-cultured with a subset of (BDCA3+) dermal DCs.

Results All infected LCs showed markers of apoptosis at 18 hr p.i. Approximately 50% of BDCA3+ DCs co-localised with infected LCs and in some cases fragments of infected LCs were observed within the dermal DC cytoplasm. Such colocalizaton of HSV antigen bearing LCs and dermal DC subsets, was also detected within biopsies of initial genital herpes lesions. The mechanism of interaction of apoptotic LCs and dermal DCs, and uptake by phagocytosis are being determined.

Conclusion Thus, a viral antigen relay takes place where HSV infected LCs slowly die by apoptosis during migration to the dermis and are taken up by dermal DCs by phagocytosis for subsequent antigen presentation. This provides a rationale for targeting these dermal DCs for mucosal or perhaps intradermal HSV immunisation.

Disclosure of interest statement No pharmaceutical grants were received in the development of this study.

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