IIG Seminar - IL-15-induced bystander T cell activation in human viral disease.

Dr. Eui-Cheol Shin investigates mechanisms of immunopathogenesis, immunosenescence, T-cell exhaustion, and human immune monitoring. Dr. Shin and his team have extensively demonstrated the pathological significance of bystander T cell activation in human disease by studying T cell responses in patients infected with viral diseases. His group has found that pre-existing bystander memory CD8+ T cells are unexpectedly activated by cytokines (e.g., IL-15) regardless of their antigen specificity, causing liver cell damage through NKG2D-mediated cytotoxicity. In characterizing IL-15-responsive bystander T cells in the liver microenvironment, Dr. Shin ’ s team has demonstrated that bystander T cells can be a significant cause of host injury in human viral infection. These studies have identified CD5 as a major negative regulator of IL-15-induced T cell proliferation and have further identified IFNg as a mediator of IL-15 production from epithelial cells. Following the COVID-19 outbreak, Dr. Shin ’ s team demonstrated that SARS-CoV-2-specific CD8+ T cells - despite expressing PD-1 - remain functionally active. On the basis of these and subsequent findings, Dr. Shin has recently proposed T cell-oriented strategies for controlling the COVID-19 pandemic.For more information go tohttps://www.niaid.nih.gov/research/immunology-seminarsAir date: 6/28/2023 4:00:00 PM
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