Influenza A, B and C viruses (IAV, IBV, ICV) circulate globally and infect humans, with IAV/IBV causing most severe disease. While CD8 + T-cells confer cross-protection against different IAV strains, CD8 + T-cell responses to IBV/ICV are understudied. We dissected the CD8 + T-cell cross-reactome against influenza viruses and provided the first evidence of CD8 + T-cell cross-reactivity across IAV, IBV and ICV. Using immunopeptidomics, we identified immunodominant CD8 + T-cell epitopes from IBV, protective in mice, and found prominent memory CD8 + T-cells towards both universal and influenza type-specific epitopes in blood and lungs of healthy humans, with lung-derived CD8 + T-cells displaying a tissue-resident phenotype. Importantly, effector CD38 + Ki67 + CD8 + T-cells against novel epitopes were readily detected in IAV-and IBV-infected pediatric and adult patients. Our study introduces a new paradigm, whereby CD8 + T-cells confer unprecedented cross-reactivity across all influenza viruses, a key finding for designing universal vaccines.
Highlights d Analyses of 184 immune features define kinetics of immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 d Circulating T FH 1 cells in acute COVID-19 correlate with antibodies d sIL-6R levels are elevated in severe COVID-19 but do not correlate with IL-6 d Elevated IL-6 and IL-18 correlate with immune cell hyperactivation
The hallmarks of COVID-19 are higher pathogenicity and mortality in the elderly compared to children. Examining baseline SARS-CoV-2 cross-reactive immunological responses, induced by circulating human coronaviruses (hCoVs), is needed to understand such divergent clinical outcomes. Here we show analysis of coronavirus antibody responses of pre-pandemic healthy children (n = 89), adults (n = 98), elderly (n = 57), and COVID-19 patients (n = 50) by systems serology. Moderate levels of cross-reactive, but non-neutralizing, SARS-CoV-2 antibodies are detected in pre-pandemic healthy individuals. SARS-CoV-2 antigen-specific Fcγ receptor binding accurately distinguishes COVID-19 patients from healthy individuals, suggesting that SARS-CoV-2 infection induces qualitative changes to antibody Fc, enhancing Fcγ receptor engagement. Higher cross-reactive SARS-CoV-2 IgA and IgG are observed in healthy elderly, while healthy children display elevated SARS-CoV-2 IgM, suggesting that children have fewer hCoV exposures, resulting in less-experienced but more polyreactive humoral immunity. Age-dependent analysis of COVID-19 patients, confirms elevated class-switched antibodies in elderly, while children have stronger Fc responses which we demonstrate are functionally different. These insights will inform COVID-19 vaccination strategies, improved serological diagnostics and therapeutics.
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