[HTML][HTML] Importance of Salmonella Typhi-Responsive CD8+ T Cell Immunity in a Human Typhoid Fever Challenge Model

S Fresnay, MA McArthur, LS Magder… - Frontiers in …, 2017 - frontiersin.org
S Fresnay, MA McArthur, LS Magder, TC Darton, C Jones, CS Waddington, CJ Blohmke…
Frontiers in immunology, 2017frontiersin.org
Typhoid fever, caused by the human-restricted organism Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi
(S. Typhi), constitutes a major global health problem. The development of improved
attenuated vaccines is pressing, but delayed by the lack of appropriate preclinical models.
Herein, we report that high levels of S. Typhi-responsive CD8+ T cells at baseline
significantly correlate with an increased risk of disease in humans challenged with a high
dose (~ 104 CFU) wild-type S. Typhi. Typhoid fever development was associated with higher …
Typhoid fever, caused by the human-restricted organism Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi (S. Typhi), constitutes a major global health problem. The development of improved attenuated vaccines is pressing, but delayed by the lack of appropriate preclinical models. Herein, we report that high levels of S. Typhi-responsive CD8+ T cells at baseline significantly correlate with an increased risk of disease in humans challenged with a high dose (~104 CFU) wild-type S. Typhi. Typhoid fever development was associated with higher multifunctional S. Typhi-responsive CD8+ T effector memory cells at baseline. Early decreases of these cells in circulation following challenge were observed in both S. Typhi-responsive integrin α4β7− and integrin α4β7+ CD8+ T effector memory (TEM) cells, suggesting their potential to home to both mucosal and extra-intestinal sites. Participants with higher baseline levels of S. Typhi-responsive CD8+ T memory cells had a higher risk of acquiring disease, but among those who acquired disease, those with a higher baseline responses took longer to develop disease. In contrast, protection against disease was associated with low or absent S. Typhi-responsive T cells at baseline and no changes in circulation following challenge. These data highlight the importance of pre-existing S. Typhi-responsive immunity in predicting clinical outcome following infection with wild-type S. Typhi and provide novel insights into the complex mechanisms involved in protective immunity to natural infection in a stringent human model with a high challenge dose. They also contribute important information on the immunological responses to be assessed in the appraisal and selection of new generation typhoid vaccines.
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