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Rapid and stable mobilization of CD8+ T cells by SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine

Authors :
Oezlem Sogukpinar
Julian Staniek
Sebastian Giese
Robert Thimme
Martin Schwemmle
Sagar
Iga Janowska
Katarina Stete
Hanna Hilger
Tobias Boettler
Janine Kemming
Valerie Oberhardt
Ales Janda
Maike Hofmann
Marta Rizzi
Julia Lang-Meli
Cornelius F. Waller
Georg Kochs
Katharina Wild
Kevin Ciminski
Benedikt Csernalabics
Jonas Fuchs
Katharina Zoldan
Kristi Basho
Fernando Topfstedt
Christoph Neumann-Haefelin
Isabel Schulien
Mircea Stefan Marinescu
Siegbert Rieg
Hendrik Luxenburger
Bertram Bengsch
Florian Emmerich
Source :
Nature. 597:268-273
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 spike mRNA vaccines1–3 mediate protection from severe disease as early as ten days after prime vaccination3, when neutralizing antibodies are hardly detectable4–6. Vaccine-induced CD8+ T cells may therefore be the main mediators of protection at this early stage7,8. The details of their induction, comparison to natural infection, and association with other arms of vaccine-induced immunity remain, however, incompletely understood. Here we show on a single-epitope level that a stable and fully functional CD8+ T cell response is vigorously mobilized one week after prime vaccination with bnt162b2, when circulating CD4+ T cells and neutralizing antibodies are still weakly detectable. Boost vaccination induced a robust expansion that generated highly differentiated effector CD8+ T cells; however, neither the functional capacity nor the memory precursor T cell pool was affected. Compared with natural infection, vaccine-induced early memory T cells exhibited similar functional capacities but a different subset distribution. Our results indicate that CD8+ T cells are important effector cells, are expanded in the early protection window after prime vaccination, precede maturation of other effector arms of vaccine-induced immunity and are stably maintained after boost vaccination.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
597
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a9cdfe5396bd1ec39ff3cf088e4fd1ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03841-4