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SARS-CoV-2 antigen exposure history shapes phenotypes and specificity of memory CD8 T cells.

Authors :
Minervina AA
Pogorelyy MV
Kirk AM
Crawford JC
Allen EK
Chou CH
Mettelman RC
Allison KJ
Lin CY
Brice DC
Zhu X
Vegesana K
Wu G
Trivedi S
Kottapalli P
Darnell D
McNeely S
Olsen SR
Schultz-Cherry S
Estepp JH
McGargill MA
Wolf J
Thomas PG
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2022 Jan 26. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jan 26.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Although mRNA vaccine efficacy against severe COVID-19 remains high, variant emergence and breakthrough infections have changed vaccine policy to include booster immunizations. However, the effect of diverse and repeated antigen exposures on SARS-CoV-2 memory T cells is poorly understood. Here, we utilize DNA-barcoded MHC-multimers combined with scRNAseq and scTCRseq to capture the ex vivo profile of SARS-CoV-2-responsive T cells within a cohort of individuals with one, two, or three antigen exposures, including vaccination, primary infection, and breakthrough infection. We found that the order of exposure determined the relative distribution between spike- and non-spike-specific responses, with vaccination after infection leading to further expansion of spike-specific T cells and differentiation to a CCR7-CD45RA+ effector phenotype. In contrast, individuals experiencing a breakthrough infection mount vigorous non-spike-specific responses. In-depth analysis of over 4,000 epitope-specific T cell receptor sequences demonstrates that all types of exposures elicit diverse repertoires characterized by shared, dominant TCR motifs, with no evidence for repertoire narrowing from repeated exposure. Our findings suggest that breakthrough infections diversify the T cell memory repertoire and that current vaccination protocols continue to expand and differentiate spike-specific memory responses.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
34341799
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.07.12.21260227