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Tracking the clonal dynamics of SARS-CoV-2-specific T cells in children and adults with mild/asymptomatic COVID-19.

Authors :
Khoo, WH
Jackson, K
Phetsouphanh, C
Zaunders, JJ
Alquicira-Hernandez, J
Yazar, S
Ruiz-Diaz, S
Singh, M
Dhenni, R
Kyaw, W
Tea, F
Merheb, V
Lee, FXZ
Burrell, R
Howard-Jones, A
Koirala, A
Zhou, L
Yuksel, A
Catchpoole, DR
Lai, CL
Vitagliano, TL
Rouet, R
Christ, D
Tang, B
West, NP
George, S
Gerrard, J
Croucher, PI
Kelleher, AD
Goodnow, CG
Sprent, JD
Powell, JE
Brilot, F
Nanan, R
Hsu, PS
Deenick, EK
Britton, PN
Phan, TG
Khoo, WH
Jackson, K
Phetsouphanh, C
Zaunders, JJ
Alquicira-Hernandez, J
Yazar, S
Ruiz-Diaz, S
Singh, M
Dhenni, R
Kyaw, W
Tea, F
Merheb, V
Lee, FXZ
Burrell, R
Howard-Jones, A
Koirala, A
Zhou, L
Yuksel, A
Catchpoole, DR
Lai, CL
Vitagliano, TL
Rouet, R
Christ, D
Tang, B
West, NP
George, S
Gerrard, J
Croucher, PI
Kelleher, AD
Goodnow, CG
Sprent, JD
Powell, JE
Brilot, F
Nanan, R
Hsu, PS
Deenick, EK
Britton, PN
Phan, TG
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Children infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) develop less severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) than adults. The mechanisms for the age-specific differences and the implications for infection-induced immunity are beginning to be uncovered. We show by longitudinal multimodal analysis that SARS-CoV-2 leaves a small footprint in the circulating T cell compartment in children with mild/asymptomatic COVID-19 compared to adult household contacts with the same disease severity who had more evidence of systemic T cell interferon activation, cytotoxicity and exhaustion. Children harbored diverse polyclonal SARS-CoV-2-specific naïve T cells whereas adults harbored clonally expanded SARS-CoV-2-specific memory T cells. A novel population of naïve interferon-activated T cells is expanded in acute COVID-19 and is recruited into the memory compartment during convalescence in adults but not children. This was associated with the development of robust CD4+ memory T cell responses in adults but not children. These data suggest that rapid clearance of SARS-CoV-2 in children may compromise their cellular immunity and ability to resist reinfection.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1439679378
Document Type :
Electronic Resource