PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Respiratory syncytial virus elicits enriched CD8+ T lymphocyte responses in lung compared with blood in African green monkeys.

  • Hualin Li,
  • Cheryl Callahan,
  • Michael Citron,
  • Zhiyun Wen,
  • Sinoeun Touch,
  • Morgan A Monslow,
  • Kara S Cox,
  • Daniel J DiStefano,
  • Kalpit A Vora,
  • Andrew Bett,
  • Amy Espeseth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187642
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. e0187642

Abstract

Read online

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of serious lower respiratory tract disease in young children and older adults throughout the world. Prevention of severe RSV disease through active immunization is optimal but no RSV vaccine has been licensed so far. Immune mechanisms of protection against RSV infection in humans have not been fully established, thus a comprehensive characterization of virus-specific immune responses in a relevant animal model will be beneficial in defining correlates of protection. In this study, we infected juvenile naive AGMs with RSV A2 strain and longitudinally assessed virus-specific humoral and cellular immune responses in both peripheral blood and the respiratory tract. RSV viral loads at nasopharyngeal surfaces and in the lung peaked at around day 5 following infection, and then largely resolved by day 10. Low levels of neutralizing antibody titers were detected in serum, with similar kinetics as RSV fusion (F) protein-binding IgG antibodies. RSV infection induced CD8+, but very little CD4+, T lymphocyte responses in peripheral blood. Virus-specific CD8+ T cell frequencies were ~10 fold higher in bronchoaveolar lavage (BAL) compared to peripheral blood and exhibited effector memory (CD95+CD28-) / tissue resident memory (CD69+CD103+) T (TRM) cell phenotypes. The kinetics of virus-specific CD8+ T cells emerging in peripheral blood and BAL correlated with declining viral titers, suggesting that virus-specific cellular responses contribute to the clearance of RSV infection. RSV-experienced AGMs were protected from subsequent exposure to RSV infection. Additional studies are underway to understand protective correlates in these seropositive monkeys.