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Adaptive immunity to human coronaviruses is widespread but low in magnitude

Authors :
Tan, H-X
Lee, WS
Wragg, KM
Nelson, C
Esterbauer, R
Kelly, HG
Amarasena, T
Jones, R
Starkey, G
Wang, BZ
Yoshino, O
Tiang, T
Grayson, ML
Opdam, H
D'Costa, R
Vago, A
Mackay, LK
Gordon, CL
Wheatley, AK
Kent, SJ
Juno, JA
Tan, H-X
Lee, WS
Wragg, KM
Nelson, C
Esterbauer, R
Kelly, HG
Amarasena, T
Jones, R
Starkey, G
Wang, BZ
Yoshino, O
Tiang, T
Grayson, ML
Opdam, H
D'Costa, R
Vago, A
Mackay, LK
Gordon, CL
Wheatley, AK
Kent, SJ
Juno, JA
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Endemic human coronaviruses (hCoVs) circulate worldwide but cause minimal mortality. Although seroconversion to hCoV is near ubiquitous during childhood, little is known about hCoV-specific T-cell memory in adults. METHODS: We quantified CD4 T-cell and antibody responses to hCoV spike antigens in 42 SARS-CoV-2-uninfected individuals. Antigen-specific memory T cells and circulating T follicular helper (cTFH) cells were identified using an activation-induced marker assay and characterised for memory phenotype and chemokine receptor expression. RESULTS: T-cell responses were widespread within conventional memory and cTFH compartments but did not correlate with IgG titres. SARS-CoV-2 cross-reactive T cells were observed in 48% of participants and correlated with HKU1 memory. hCoV-specific T cells exhibited a CCR6+ central memory phenotype in the blood, but were enriched for frequency and CXCR3 expression in human lung-draining lymph nodes. CONCLUSION: Overall, hCoV-specific humoral and cellular memory are independently maintained, with a shared phenotype existing among coronavirus-specific CD4 T cells. This understanding of endemic coronavirus immunity provides insight into the homeostatic maintenance of immune responses that are likely to be critical components of protection against SARS-CoV-2.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315683892
Document Type :
Electronic Resource