Abstract

Although mRNA vaccine efficacy against severe COVID-19 remains high, variant emergence has prompted booster immunizations. However, repeated antigen exposure effects on SARS-CoV-2 memory T cells are poorly understood. Here, we utilize MHC-multimers with scRNAseq to profile SARS-CoV-2-responsive T cells ex vivo from humans with one, two, or three antigen exposures, including vaccination, primary, and breakthrough infection. Exposure order determined the distribution between spike- and non-spike-specific responses, with vaccination after infection leading to expansion of spike-specific T cells and differentiation to CCR7-CD45RA+ effectors. In contrast, individuals after breakthrough infection mount vigorous non-spike-specific responses. Analysis of over 4,000 epitope-specific T cell receptor sequences demonstrates that all exposures elicit diverse repertoires characterized by shared TCR motifs, confirmed by monoclonal TCR characterization, with no evidence for repertoire narrowing from repeated exposure. Our findings suggest that breakthrough infections diversify the T cell memory repertoire and current vaccination protocols continue to expand and differentiate spike-specific memory.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call