Publication | Open Access
Rapid and stable mobilization of CD8+ T cells by SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine
412
Citations
25
References
2021
Year
SARS-CoV-2 spike mRNA vaccines<sup>1-3</sup> mediate protection from severe disease as early as ten days after prime vaccination<sup>3</sup>, when neutralizing antibodies are hardly detectable<sup>4-6</sup>. Vaccine-induced CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells may therefore be the main mediators of protection at this early stage<sup>7,8</sup>. The details of their induction, comparison to natural infection, and association with other arms of vaccine-induced immunity remain, however, incompletely understood. Here we show on a single-epitope level that a stable and fully functional CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell response is vigorously mobilized one week after prime vaccination with bnt162b2, when circulating CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells and neutralizing antibodies are still weakly detectable. Boost vaccination induced a robust expansion that generated highly differentiated effector CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells; however, neither the functional capacity nor the memory precursor T cell pool was affected. Compared with natural infection, vaccine-induced early memory T cells exhibited similar functional capacities but a different subset distribution. Our results indicate that CD8<sup>+</sup> T cells are important effector cells, are expanded in the early protection window after prime vaccination, precede maturation of other effector arms of vaccine-induced immunity and are stably maintained after boost vaccination.
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