Back to Search Start Over

Establishment and recall of SARS-CoV-2 spike epitope-specific CD4+ T cell memory

Authors :
Wragg, KM
Lee, WS
Koutsakos, M
Tan, H-X
Amarasena, T
Reynaldi, A
Gare, G
Konstandopoulos, P
Field, KR
Esterbauer, R
Kent, HE
Davenport, MP
Wheatley, AK
Kent, SJ
Juno, JA
Wragg, KM
Lee, WS
Koutsakos, M
Tan, H-X
Amarasena, T
Reynaldi, A
Gare, G
Konstandopoulos, P
Field, KR
Esterbauer, R
Kent, HE
Davenport, MP
Wheatley, AK
Kent, SJ
Juno, JA
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and vaccination elicit CD4+ T cell responses to the spike protein, including circulating follicular helper T (cTFH) cells that correlate with neutralizing antibodies. Using a novel HLA-DRB1*15:01/S751 tetramer to track spike-specific CD4+ T cells, we show that primary infection or vaccination induces robust S751-specific CXCR5- and cTFH cell memory responses. Secondary exposure induced recall of CD4+ T cells with a transitory CXCR3+ phenotype, and drove expansion of cTFH cells transiently expressing ICOS, CD38 and PD-1. In both contexts, cells exhibited a restricted T cell antigen receptor repertoire, including a highly public clonotype and considerable clonotypic overlap between CXCR5- and cTFH populations. Following a third vaccine dose, the rapid re-expansion of spike-specific CD4+ T cells contrasted with the comparatively delayed increase in antibody titers. Overall, we demonstrate that stable pools of cTFH and memory CD4+ T cells established by infection and/or vaccination are efficiently recalled upon antigen reexposure and may contribute to long-term protection against SARS-CoV-2.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1397539689
Document Type :
Electronic Resource