Repeated mRNA vaccination sequentially boosts SARS-CoV-2-specific CD8+ T cells in persons with previous COVID-19.

Journal: Nature Immunology
Published:
Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) hybrid immunity is more protective than vaccination or previous infection alone. To investigate the kinetics of spike-reactive T (TS) cells from SARS-CoV-2 infection through messenger RNA vaccination in persons with hybrid immunity, we identified the T cell receptor (TCR) sequences of thousands of index TS cells and tracked their frequency in bulk TCRβ repertoires sampled longitudinally from the peripheral blood of persons who had recovered from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Vaccinations led to large expansions in memory TS cell clonotypes, most of which were CD8+ T cells, while also eliciting diverse TS cell clonotypes not observed before vaccination. TCR sequence similarity clustering identified public CD8+ and CD4+ TCR motifs associated with spike (S) specificity. Synthesis of longitudinal bulk ex vivo single-chain TCRβ repertoires and paired-chain TCRɑβ sequences from droplet sequencing of TS cells provides a roadmap for the rapid assessment of T cell responses to vaccines and emerging pathogens.

Authors
Emily Ford, Koshlan Mayer Blackwell, Lichen Jing, Kerry Laing, Anton Sholukh, Russell St Germain, Emily Bossard, Hong Xie, Thomas Pulliam, Saumya Jani, Stacy Selke, Carlissa Burrow, Christopher Mcclurkan, Anna Wald, Alexander Greninger, Michael Holbrook, Brett Eaton, Elizabeth Eudy, Michael Murphy, Elena Postnikova, Harlan Robins, Rebecca Elyanow, Rachel Gittelman, Matyas Ecsedi, Elise Wilcox, Aude Chapuis, Andrew Fiore Gartland, David Koelle