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Preschool-age children maintain a distinct memory CD4 + T cell and memory B cell response after SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Benoît ManfroiBui Thi CucAurélien SokalAlexis VandenbergheSarah TemmamMikaël AttiaMohamed El BehiFrancesco CamagliaNgan Thu NguyenJelka PoharLayale Salem-WehbeValentine Pottez-JouatteSibyline BorzakianNarcisse ElengaCaroline GaleottiGuillaume MorelleCamille de Truchis de LaysMichaela SemeraroAnne-Sophie RomainMélodie AubartNaim OuldaliFlorence Mahuteau-BetzerClaire BeauvineauElsa AmouyalRomain BerthaudCélia CrétolleMarc Duval ArnouldAlbert FayeMathie LorrotGrégoire BenoistNelly BriandMarie CourbebaisseRoland MartinPeter Van EndertJean-Sébastien HulotAnne BlanchardEric TartourMaria C Leite-de-MoraesGuillaume LezmiMickael MénagerMarine LukaClaude-Agnès ReynaudJean-Claude WeillLaetitia LanguilleMarc MichelPascal ChappertThierry MoraAleksandra M WalczakMarc EloitPetra BacherAlexander ScheffoldMatthieu MahevasIsabelle Sermet-GaudelusSimon Fillatreau
Published in: Science translational medicine (2024)
The development of the human immune system lasts for several years after birth. The impact of this maturation phase on the quality of adaptive immunity and the acquisition of immunological memory after infection at a young age remains incompletely defined. Here, using an antigen-reactive T cell (ARTE) assay and multidimensional flow cytometry, we profiled circulating severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-reactive CD3 + CD4 + CD154 + T cells in children and adults before infection, during infection, and 11 months after infection, stratifying children into separate age groups and adults according to disease severity. During SARS-CoV-2 infection, children younger than 5 years old displayed a lower antiviral CD4 + T cell response, whereas children older than 5 years and adults with mild disease had, quantitatively and phenotypically, comparable virus-reactive CD4 + T cell responses. Adults with severe disease mounted a response characterized by higher frequencies of virus-reactive proinflammatory and cytotoxic T cells. After SARS-CoV-2 infection, preschool-age children not only maintained neutralizing SARS-CoV-2-reactive antibodies postinfection comparable to adults but also had phenotypically distinct memory T cells displaying high inflammatory features and properties associated with migration toward inflamed sites. Moreover, preschool-age children had markedly fewer circulating virus-reactive memory B cells compared with the other cohorts. Collectively, our results reveal unique facets of antiviral immunity in humans at a young age and indicate that the maturation of adaptive responses against SARS-CoV-2 toward an adult-like profile occurs in a progressive manner.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • young adults
  • working memory
  • multiple sclerosis
  • endothelial cells
  • physical activity
  • pregnant women