Abstract

Latent infection with cytomegalovirus (CMV) is assumed to contribute to the age-associated decline of the immune system. CMV induces large changes in the T-cell pool and may thereby affect other immune responses. CMV is expected to impact especially older adults, who are already at higher risk of severe disease and hospitalization upon infections such as influenza virus (IAV) infection. Here, we investigated the impact of CMV infection on IAV-specific CD8+ T-cell frequencies in healthy individuals (n=96) and the response to IAV infection in older adults (n=72). IAV-specific memory T-cell frequencies were lower in healthy CMV+ older individuals compared to healthy CMV- older individuals. Upon acute IAV infection, CMV serostatus or CMV-specific antibody levels were not negatively associated with IAV-specific T-cell frequencies, function, phenotype or T-cell receptor repertoire diversity. This suggests that specific T-cell responses upon acute IAV infection are not negatively affected by CMV. In addition, we found neither an association between CMV infection and inflammatory cytokine levels in serum during acute IAV infection nor between cytokine levels and the height of the IAV-specific T-cell response upon infection. Finally, CMV infection was not associated with increased severity of influenza-related symptoms. In fact, CMV infection was even associated with increased IAV-specific T-cell responses early upon acute IAV infection. In conclusion, although associated with lower frequencies of memory IAV-specific T cells in healthy individuals, CMV infection does not seem to hamper the induction of a proper T-cell response during acute IAV infection in older adults.

Highlights

  • As CMV might only affect the immune system through competition for “limited immunological space” in individuals with large CMV-specific T-cell responses, we investigated the association between CMV infection and the T-cell response to influenza virus (IAV) by taking into account the magnitude of the IFNg CMVspecific T-cell responses within CMV+ individuals

  • In this study we investigated the impact of CMV infection on the immune response to IAV

  • We found that CMV infection is associated with a more differentiated and senescent phenotype of CD8+ T cells

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Summary

Introduction

Age-related changes of the immune system mainly occur in the T-cell pool, including an increase in the number of CD45RA+ memory T cells [3, 4] and decreased diversity of Frontiers in Immunology | www.frontiersin.org van den Berg et al. CMV Does Not Affect Influenza-Response the T-cell receptor repertoire [5, 6]. CMV seropositivity is the largest non-heritable factor influencing differences among humans in the immune profile [11]. Since the 2000s, it is often hypothesized that CMV might impair the human immune response to a heterologous challenge [6, 12, 13], as was shown in mice [14,15,16]

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