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Ass. Lect. Ekramy El-sayed Tawfeik Sayed Ahmed :: Publications:

Title:
The frequency and function of nucleoprotein-specific CD8+ T cells are critical for heterosubtypic immunity against influenza virus infection
Authors: Amoah S, Cao W, Sayedahmed EE, Wang Y, Kumar A, Mishina M, Eddins DJ, Wang W-C, Burroughs M, Sheth M, Lee J, Shieh W-J, Ray SD, Bohannon CD, Ranjan P, Sharma SD, Hoehner J, Arthur RA, Gangappa S, Wakamatsu N, Johnston HR, Pohl J, Mittal SK, Sambhara S
Year: 2025
Keywords: CTL; RNA-seq; adeno vector; influenza.
Journal: J Virol
Volume: 20;98(8):e0071124.
Issue: 20;98(8):e0071124.
Pages: 20;98(8):e0071124.
Publisher: ASM
Local/International: International
Paper Link:
Full paper Not Available
Supplementary materials Not Available
Abstract:

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) mediate host defense against viral and intracellular bacterial infections and tumors. However, the magnitude of CTL response and their function needed to confer heterosubtypic immunity against influenza virus infection are unknown. We addressed the role of CD8+ T cells in the absence of any cross-reactive antibody responses to influenza viral proteins using an adenoviral vector expressing a 9mer amino acid sequence recognized by CD8+ T cells. Our results indicate that both CD8+ T cell frequency and function are crucial for heterosubtypic immunity. Low morbidity, lower viral lung titers, low to minimal lung pathology, and better survival upon heterosubtypic virus challenge correlated with the increased frequency of NP-specific CTLs. NP-CD8+ T cells induced by differential infection doses displayed distinct RNA transcriptome profiles and functional properties. CD8+ T cells induced by a high dose of influenza virus secreted significantly higher levels of IFN-γ and exhibited higher levels of cytotoxic function. The mice that received NP-CD8+ T cells from the high-dose virus recipients through adoptive transfer had lower viral titers following viral challenge than those induced by the low dose of virus, suggesting differential cellular programming by antigen dose. Enhanced NP-CD8+ T-cell functions induced by a higher dose of influenza virus strongly correlated with the increased expression of cellular and metabolic genes, indicating a shift to a more glycolytic metabolic phenotype. These findings have implications for developing effective T cell vaccines against infectious diseases and cancer.

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