Abstract

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) can cause bronchiolitis and viral pneumonia in young children and the elderly. Lack of vaccines and recurrence of RSV infection indicate the difficulty in eliciting protective memory immune responses. Tissue resident memory T cells (TRM) can confer protection from pathogen re-infection and, in human experimental RSV infection, the presence of lung CD8+ TRM cells correlates with a better outcome. However, the requirements for generating and maintaining lung TRM cells during RSV infection are not fully understood. Here, we use mouse models to assess the impact of innate immune response determinants in the generation and subsequent expansion of the TRM cell pool during RSV infection. We show that CD8+ TRM cells expand independently from systemic CD8+ T cells after RSV re-infection. Re-infected MAVS and MyD88/TRIF deficient mice, lacking key components involved in innate immune recognition of RSV and induction of type I interferons (IFN-α/β), display impaired expansion of CD8+ TRM cells and reduction in antigen specific production of granzyme B and IFN-γ. IFN-α treatment of MAVS deficient mice during primary RSV infection restored TRM cell expansion upon re-challenge but failed to recover TRM cell functionality. Our data reveal how innate immunity, including the axis controlling type I IFN induction, instructs and regulates CD8+ TRM cell responses to RSV infection, suggesting possible mechanisms for therapeutic intervention.

Highlights

  • The lungs are a major gateway for highly contagious pathogens that constantly threaten human health

  • We show that the innate immune response during Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) infection determines how lung resident CD8+ memory T cells behave during a re-encounter

  • CD8+ tissue resident memory T cell response rely on type I interferons retinoic acid-inducible gene I (RIG-I) and melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 (MDA-5) [28,29,30]

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Summary

Introduction

The lungs are a major gateway for highly contagious pathogens that constantly threaten human health. As respiratory viral infections are usually confined to the lung and only spread systemically in some of the most severe cases, control of infection mostly relies on lung resident immune mechanisms [1]. In the lungs of humans and mice, TRM cells can express integrin α1 sub-unit (CD49a) and CCL16 chemokine receptor CXCR6[8,9,10] but are heterogeneous and exhibit different expression levels of other surface markers [11,12]. TRM cells are important for the control of viral respiratory infections, as well as being the main drivers of heterosubtypic immunity to influenza A (IAV) infection [13,14,15,16,17,18,19]

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