BCG vaccination induces antibacterial effector functions among Vδ1/3 T cells that are associated with protection against tuberculosis
Megan D. Maerz, Mohau S. Makatsa, Allison N. Bucsan, Matthew S. Sutton, Emma Bishop, Ziwei Tian, Erik D. Layton, Mario Roederer, et al. (14 authors)
Cell Reports Medicine · 2026-01
Abstract
γδ T cells expressing a Vδ1/3+ T cell receptor are enriched at mucosal surfaces, but their role in protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is largely unknown. We used multimodal single-cell RNA sequencing, mass cytometry, and flow cytometry to profile γδ T cells from human infants and macaques after protective vaccination with Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette Guerin (BCG). A subset of Vδ1/3 T cells in BCG-vaccinated human infants shows evidence of clonal expansion and differentiation into Mtb-reactive cytotoxic effector cells. In macaques, intravenous BCG induces pro-inflammatory and cytotoxic responses to Mtb among Vδ1/3 T cells that are enriched in the airway compared to the blood. Finally, the frequency of cytokine-expressing Vδ1/3 T cells in the airway is associated with protection against Mtb challenge. Thus, Vδ1/3 T cells are activated by BCG and accumulate in the lung, where they upregulate cytotoxic and pro-inflammatory functions that may contribute to protective immunity against Mtb.
MeSH terms
- Cytotoxic T cell
- Mycobacterium bovis
- Immunology
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Effector
- Tuberculosis
- Vaccination
- Flow cytometry
- Biology
- Immunity
- T cell
- Microbiology
- Virology
- Interleukin 21
- Medicine
- Immune system
- BCG vaccine
- IL-2 receptor
- Tuberculosis vaccines
- T lymphocyte