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Post-acute immunological and behavioral sequelae in mice after Omicron infection.

Tongcui MaRahul K SuryawanshiStephanie R MillerKatie K LyReuben ThomasNatalie ElphickKailin YinXiaoyu LuoNick KalissIrene P ChenMauricio MontanoBharath SreekumarLudger StandkerJan MünchF Heath DamronJorge J PalopMelanie OttNadia R Roan
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Progress in understanding long COVID and developing effective therapeutics is hampered in part by the lack of suitable animal models. Here we used ACE2-transgenic mice recovered from Omicron (BA.1) infection to test for pulmonary and behavioral post-acute sequelae. Through in-depth phenotyping by CyTOF, we demonstrate that naïve mice experiencing a first Omicron infection exhibit profound immune perturbations in the lung after resolving acute infection. This is not observed if mice were first vaccinated with spike-encoding mRNA. The protective effects of vaccination against post-acute sequelae were associated with a highly polyfunctional SARS-CoV-2-specific T cell response that was recalled upon BA.1 breakthrough infection but not seen with BA.1 infection alone. Without vaccination, the chemokine receptor CXCR4 was uniquely upregulated on multiple pulmonary immune subsets in the BA.1 convalescent mice, a process previously connected to severe COVID-19. Taking advantage of recent developments in AI-based assessments of murine behaviors, we demonstrate that BA.1 convalescent mice respond abnormally to a stimulus after repeated presentations (habituation). Collectively, our data identify immunological and behavioral post-acute sequelae after Omicron infection and uncover a protective effect of vaccination.
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