Influenza virus specific CD8+ T cells exacerbate infection following high dose influenza challenge of aged mice

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Abstract

Influenza viruses cause severe illnesses and death, mainly in the aged population. Protection afforded by licensed vaccines through subtype-specific neutralizing antibodies is incomplete, especially when the vaccine antigens fail to closely match those of the circulating viral strains. Efforts are underway to generate a so-called universal influenza vaccine expressing conserved viral sequences that induce broad protection to multiple strains of influenza virus through the induction of CD8+ T cells. Here we assess the effect of a potent antiviral CD8+ T cell response on influenza virus infection of young and aged mice. Our results show that CD8+ T cell-inducing vaccines can provide some protection to young mice, but they exacerbate influenza virus-associated disease in aged mice, causing extensive lung pathology and death. © 2013 E. M. Parzych et al.

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Parzych, E. M., Dimenna, L. J., Latimer, B. P., Small, J. C., Kannan, S., Manson, B., … Ertl, H. C. (2013). Influenza virus specific CD8+ T cells exacerbate infection following high dose influenza challenge of aged mice. BioMed Research International, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/876314

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