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Data from The Polarity and Specificity of Antiviral T Lymphocyte Responses Determine Susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Patients with Cancer and Healthy Individuals

Authors :
Laurence Zitvogel
Lisa Derosa
Markus Maeurer
Bernard La Scola
Guido Kroemer
Odile Launay
Emma Guttman-Yassky
Florence Fenollar
Sophie Caillat-Zucman
Mathieu F. Chevalier
Juliette Villemonteix
Fabrice André
Miriam Merad
Jean-Charles Soria
Jean-Yves Blay
Frank Griscelli
Aurélien Marabelle
Florian Scotté
Mansouria Merad
Jean-Philippe Spano
Bertrand Gachot
Eric Deutsch
Nathalie Droin
Marc Deloger
Pernelle Lavaud
Emeline Colomba
Fanny Pommeret
Emmanuelle Gallois
Caroline Pradon
Yeriel Estrada
Benjamin Ungar
Alexandre Trubert
Fabrice Barlesi
Guy Gorochov
Makoto Miyara
Abdelhakim Ahmed-Belkacem
Lydia Meziani
Nadine Benhamouda
Eric Tartour
Pierre Ly
Caroline Flament
Eugenie Pizzato
Safae Terrisse
François-Xavier Danlos
Marianne Gazzano
Benoît Kloeckner
Alice Bernard-Tessier
Ariane Laparra
Joana R. Lérias
Luigi Cerbone
Marion Picard
Camille Bigenwald
Roxanne Birebent
Gladys Ferrere
Arthur Geraud
Agathe Dubuisson
Cléa Melenotte
Cassandra Thelemaque
Eric de Sousa
Carolina Alves Costa Silva
Damien Drubay
Marine Mazzenga
Agathe Carrier
Yacine Haddad
Anne-Gaëlle Goubet
Imran Lahmar
Jean-Eudes Fahrner
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Vaccination against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) relies on the in-depth understanding of protective immune responses to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). We characterized the polarity and specificity of memory T cells directed against SARS-CoV-2 viral lysates and peptides to determine correlates with spontaneous, virus-elicited, or vaccine-induced protection against COVID-19 in disease-free and cancer-bearing individuals. A disbalance between type 1 and 2 cytokine release was associated with high susceptibility to COVID-19. Individuals susceptible to infection exhibited a specific deficit in the T helper 1/T cytotoxic 1 (Th1/Tc1) peptide repertoire affecting the receptor binding domain of the spike protein (S1-RBD), a hotspot of viral mutations. Current vaccines triggered Th1/Tc1 responses in only a fraction of all subject categories, more effectively against the original sequence of S1-RBD than that from viral variants. We speculate that the next generation of vaccines should elicit Th1/Tc1 T-cell responses against the S1-RBD domain of emerging viral variants.Significance:This study prospectively analyzed virus-specific T-cell correlates of protection against COVID-19 in healthy and cancer-bearing individuals. A disbalance between Th1/Th2 recall responses conferred susceptibility to COVID-19 in both populations, coinciding with selective defects in Th1 recognition of the receptor binding domain of spike.See related commentary by McGary and Vardhana, p. 892.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 873

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f52e7d47277dd890e9b4f02916b1f56
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6549506.v1