T Cell Responses to Whole SARS Coronavirus in Humans

Chris Ka‐fai Li(University of Oxford), Hao Wu(Beijing YouAn Hospital), Huiping Yan(Beijing YouAn Hospital), Shiwu Ma(Southern Medical University), Lili Wang(University of Oxford), Mingxia Zhang(Southern Medical University), Xiaoping Tang(Twelfth Guangzhou City People's Hospital), Nigel Temperton(University College London), Robin A. Weiss(University College London), Jason M. Brenchley(National Institutes of Health), Daniel C. Douek(National Institutes of Health), Juthathip Mongkolsapaya(Hammersmith Hospital), Bac-Hai Tran(Hammersmith Hospital), Chen-Lung Steve Lin(Hammersmith Hospital), Gavin Screaton(Hammersmith Hospital), Jin-Lin Hou(Southern Medical University), Andrew J. McMichael(University of Oxford), Xiao-Ning Xu(University of Oxford)
The Journal of Immunology
October 1, 2008
Cited by 541Open Access
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Abstract

Effective vaccines should confer long-term protection against future outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) caused by a novel zoonotic coronavirus (SARS-CoV) with unknown animal reservoirs. We conducted a cohort study examining multiple parameters of immune responses to SARS-CoV infection, aiming to identify the immune correlates of protection. We used a matrix of overlapping peptides spanning whole SARS-CoV proteome to determine T cell responses from 128 SARS convalescent samples by ex vivo IFN-gamma ELISPOT assays. Approximately 50% of convalescent SARS patients were positive for T cell responses, and 90% possessed strongly neutralizing Abs. Fifty-five novel T cell epitopes were identified, with spike protein dominating total T cell responses. CD8(+) T cell responses were more frequent and of a greater magnitude than CD4(+) T cell responses (p < 0.001). Polychromatic cytometry analysis indicated that the virus-specific T cells from the severe group tended to be a central memory phenotype (CD27(+)/CD45RO(+)) with a significantly higher frequency of polyfunctional CD4(+) T cells producing IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and IL-2, and CD8(+) T cells producing IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and CD107a (degranulation), as compared with the mild-moderate group. Strong T cell responses correlated significantly (p < 0.05) with higher neutralizing Ab. The serum cytokine profile during acute infection indicated a significant elevation of innate immune responses. Increased Th2 cytokines were observed in patients with fatal infection. Our study provides a roadmap for the immunogenicity of SARS-CoV and types of immune responses that may be responsible for the virus clearance, and should serve as a benchmark for SARS-CoV vaccine design and evaluation.


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