Frontiers in Immunology (Dec 2023)

Vaccine induced memory CD8+ T cells efficiently prevent viral transmission from the respiratory tract

  • Jinglin Zhou,
  • Ida Uddback,
  • Jacob E. Kohlmeier,
  • Jan Pravsgaard Christensen,
  • Allan Randrup Thomsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1322536
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionMucosal immunization eliciting local T-cell memory has been suggested for improved protection against respiratory infections caused by viral variants evading pre-existing antibodies. However, it remains unclear whether T-cell targeted vaccines suffice for prevention of viral transmission and to which extent local immunity is important in this context.MethodsTo study the impact of T-cell vaccination on the course of viral respiratory infection and in particular the capacity to inhibit viral transmission, we used a mouse model involving natural murine parainfluenza infection with a luciferase encoding virus and an adenovirus based nucleoprotein targeting vaccine.Results and discussionPrior intranasal immunization inducing strong mucosal CD8+ T cell immunity provided an almost immediate shut-down of the incipient infection and completely inhibited contact based viral spreading. If this first line of defense did not operate, as in parentally immunized mice, recirculating T cells participated in accelerated viral control that reduced the intensity of inter-individual transmission. These observations underscore the importance of pursuing the development of mucosal T-cell inducing vaccines for optimal protection of the individual and inhibition of inter-individual transmission (herd immunity), while at the same time explain why induction of a strong systemic T-cell response may still impact viral transmission.

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