Abstract

CD8+ T cells directed against conserved viral regions elicit broad immunity against distinct influenza viruses, promote rapid virus elimination and enhanced host recovery. The influenza neuraminidase inhibitor, oseltamivir, is prescribed for therapy and prophylaxis, although it remains unclear how the drug impacts disease severity and establishment of effector and memory CD8+ T cell immunity. We dissected the effects of oseltamivir on viral replication, inflammation, acute CD8+ T cell responses and the establishment of immunological CD8+ T cell memory. In mice, ferrets and humans, the effect of osteltamivir on viral titre was relatively modest. However, prophylactic oseltamivir treatment in mice markedly reduced morbidity, innate responses, inflammation and, ultimately, the magnitude of effector CD8+ T cell responses. Importantly, functional memory CD8+ T cells established during the drug-reduced effector phase were capable of mounting robust recall responses. Moreover, influenza-specific memory CD4+ T cells could be also recalled after the secondary challenge, while the antibody levels were unaffected. This provides evidence that long-term memory T cells can be generated during an oseltamivir-interrupted infection. The anti-inflammatory effect of oseltamivir was verified in H1N1-infected patients. Thus, in the case of an unpredicted influenza pandemic, while prophylactic oseltamivir treatment can reduce disease severity, the capacity to generate memory CD8+ T cells specific for the newly emerged virus is uncompromised. This could prove especially important for any new influenza pandemic which often occurs in separate waves.

Highlights

  • Influenza viruses continually mutate, and the resultant ‘drifts’ cause seasonal epidemics, resulting in 3–5 million clinical infections and up to 500,000 deaths worldwide annually [1]

  • The significant reduction in inflammatory TNFα (Fig 2C), MIP-1α (Fig 2D), MCP-1 (Fig 2E), RANTES (Fig 2F), IL-6 (Fig 2G) and IFN-γ (Fig 2H) in the lungs of oseltamivir-treated mice can explain, at least in part, the much milder symptoms of influenza virus infection following oseltamivir prophylaxis. These findings suggest that a substantial viral load was present at d3, the virus was controlled by oseltamivir in a way that did not induce a profound inflammatory environment in the infected lung

  • We examined the maintenance of influenza-specific CD4+ T cell memory in oseltamivir and PBS-treated mice after infection and found similar total numbers (p>0.05) of I-AbHA211 and I-AbNP311-specific CD4+ T cells in the MedLN at d40 (Fig 7A)

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Summary

Introduction

The resultant ‘drifts’ cause seasonal epidemics, resulting in 3–5 million clinical infections and up to 500,000 deaths worldwide annually [1]. In contrast to neutralising antibodies, CD8+ T cells directed toward the more conserved internal viral antigens can elicit cross-strain responses to ameliorate disease severity upon re-infection with HA- and NA-distinct viruses. Our data suggest that prophylactic oseltamivir treatment, causing a marked reduction in influenza-related morbidity, inflammation, and effector CD8+ and CD4+ T cell responses, permits the generation of functional, long-lived, and cross-strain responsive memory CD8+ and CD4+ T cell pools. Of note, this improvement in morbidity and inflammation was observed even in the absence of strong effects on measured viral titre. Prophylactic oseltamivir treatment reduces disease severity without compromising the capacity to generate memory T cells to the newly emerged virus

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