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gB co‐immunization with GP96 enhances pulmonary‐resident CD8 T cells and exerts a long‐term defence against MCMV pneumonitis
Author(s) -
Guo Bingnan,
Xu Peifeng,
Chai Dafei,
Cao Lei,
Liu Lin,
Song Tengfei,
Hu Shuqun,
Chen Yuling,
Yan Xianliang,
Xu Tie
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of cellular and molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.44
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1582-4934
pISSN - 1582-1838
DOI - 10.1111/jcmm.16065
Subject(s) - pneumonitis , immunology , cd8 , immunization , hypersensitivity pneumonitis , adjuvant , lung , virology , medicine , biology , spleen , immune system
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection in the respiratory tract leads to pneumonitis in immunocompromised hosts without available vaccine. Considering cytomegalovirus (CMV) mainly invades through the respiratory tract, CMV‐specific pulmonary mucosal vaccine development that provides a long‐lasting protection against CMV challenge gains our attention. In this study, N‐terminal domain of GP96 (GP96‐NT) was used as a mucosal adjuvant to enhance the induction of pulmonary‐resident CD8 T cells elicited by MCMV glycoprotein B (gB) vaccine. Mice were intranasally co‐immunized with 50 μg pgB and equal amount of pGP96‐NT vaccine 4 times at 2‐week intervals, and then i.n . challenged with MCMV at 16 weeks after the last immunization. Compared with pgB immunization alone, co‐immunization with pgB/pGP96‐NT enhanced a long‐lasting protection against MCMV pneumonitis by significantly improved pneumonitis pathology, enhanced bodyweight, reduced viral burdens and increased survival rate. Moreover, the increased CD8 T cells were observed in lung but not spleen from pgB/pGP96‐NT co‐immunized mice. The increments of pulmonary CD8 T cells might be mainly due to non‐circulating pulmonary‐resident CD8 T‐cell subset expansion but not circulating CD8 T‐cell populations that home to inflammation site upon MCMV challenge. Finally, the deterioration of MCMV pneumonitis by depletion of pulmonary site‐specific CD8 T cells in mice that were pgB/pGP96‐NT co‐immunization might be a clue to interpret the non‐circulating pulmonary‐resident CD8 T subset expansion. These data might uncover a promising long‐lasting prophylactic vaccine strategy against MCMV‐induced pneumonitis.

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