The frequency and function of nucleoprotein-specific CD8 + T cells are critical for heterosubtypic immunity against influenza virus infection.
Samuel AmoahWeiping CaoEkramy E SayedahmedYuanyuan WangAmrita KumarMargarita MishinaDevon J EddinsWen-Chien WangMark BurroughsMili ShethJustin LeeWun-Ju ShiehSean D RayCaitlin D BohannonPriya RanjanSuresh D SharmaJessica HoehnerRobert A ArthurShivaprakash GangappaNobuko WakamatsuH Richard JohnstonJan PohlSuresh K MittalSuryaprakash SambharaPublished in: Journal of virology (2024)
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are an important component of the adaptive immune system that clears virus-infected cells or tumor cells. Hence, developing next-generation vaccines that induce or recall CTL responses against cancer and infectious diseases is crucial. However, it is not clear if the frequency, function, or both are essential in conferring protection, as in the case of influenza. In this study, we demonstrate that both CTL frequency and function are crucial for providing heterosubtypic immunity to influenza by utilizing an Ad-viral vector expressing a CD8 epitope only to rule out the role of antibodies, single-cell RNA-seq analysis, as well as adoptive transfer experiments. Our findings have implications for developing T cell vaccines against infectious diseases and cancer.