PLoS Pathogens (Jan 2015)

Memory Th1 Cells Are Protective in Invasive Staphylococcus aureus Infection.

  • Aisling F Brown,
  • Alison G Murphy,
  • Stephen J Lalor,
  • John M Leech,
  • Kate M O'Keeffe,
  • Micheál Mac Aogáin,
  • Dara P O'Halloran,
  • Keenan A Lacey,
  • Mehri Tavakol,
  • Claire H Hearnden,
  • Deirdre Fitzgerald-Hughes,
  • Hilary Humphreys,
  • Jérôme P Fennell,
  • Willem J van Wamel,
  • Timothy J Foster,
  • Joan A Geoghegan,
  • Ed C Lavelle,
  • Thomas R Rogers,
  • Rachel M McLoughlin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1005226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. e1005226

Abstract

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Mechanisms of protective immunity to Staphylococcus aureus infection in humans remain elusive. While the importance of cellular immunity has been shown in mice, T cell responses in humans have not been characterised. Using a murine model of recurrent S. aureus peritonitis, we demonstrated that prior exposure to S. aureus enhanced IFNγ responses upon subsequent infection, while adoptive transfer of S. aureus antigen-specific Th1 cells was protective in naïve mice. Translating these findings, we found that S. aureus antigen-specific Th1 cells were also significantly expanded during human S. aureus bloodstream infection (BSI). These Th1 cells were CD45RO+, indicative of a memory phenotype. Thus, exposure to S. aureus induces memory Th1 cells in mice and humans, identifying Th1 cells as potential S. aureus vaccine targets. Consequently, we developed a model vaccine comprising staphylococcal clumping factor A, which we demonstrate to be an effective human T cell antigen, combined with the Th1-driving adjuvant CpG. This novel Th1-inducing vaccine conferred significant protection during S. aureus infection in mice. This study notably advances our understanding of S. aureus cellular immunity, and demonstrates for the first time that a correlate of S. aureus protective immunity identified in mice may be relevant in humans.