<i>In Vivo</i> Antigen Expression Regulates CD4 T Cell Differentiation and Vaccine Efficacy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection
Helena Strand Clemmensen, Jean-Yves Dubé, Fiona McIntosh, Ida Rosenkrands, Gregers Jungersen, Claus Aagaard, Peter Andersen, Marcel A. Behr, et al. (9 authors)
mBio · 2021-04
Abstract
Tuberculosis, caused by Mtb, constitutes a global health crisis of massive proportions and the impact of the current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is expected to cause a rise in tuberculosis-related deaths. Improved vaccines are therefore needed more than ever, but a lack of knowledge on protective immunity hampers their development. The present study shows that constitutively expressed antigens with high availability drive highly differentiated CD4 T cells with diminished protective capacity, which could be a survival strategy by Mtb to evade T cell immunity against key antigens. We demonstrate that immunization with such antigens can counteract this phenomenon by maintaining antigen-specific T cells in a state of low differentiation. Future vaccine strategies should therefore explore combinations of multiple highly expressed antigens and we suggest that T cell differentiation could be used as a readily measurable parameter to identify these in both preclinical and clinical studies.
MeSH terms
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Antigen
- Tuberculosis
- In vivo
- Immunology
- Virology
- Biology
- Microbiology
- Tuberculosis vaccines
- Medicine