Influenza infection fortifies local lymph nodes to promote lung-resident heterosubtypic immunity

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Abstract

Influenza infection generates tissue-resident memory T cells (TRMs) that are maintained in the lung and can mediate protective immunity to heterologous influenza strains, but the precise mechanisms of local T cell–mediated protection are not well understood. In a murine heterosubtypic influenza challenge model, we demonstrate that protective lung T cell responses derive from both in situ activation of TRMs and the enhanced generation of effector T cells from the local lung draining mediastinal lymph nodes (medLNs). Primary infection fortified the medLNs with an increased number of conventional dendritic cells (cDCs) that mediate enhanced priming of T cells, including those specific for newly encountered epitopes; cDC depletion during the recall response diminished medLN T cell generation and heterosubtypic immunity. Our study shows that during a protective recall response, cDCs in a fortified LN environment enhance the breadth, generation, and tissue migration of effector T cells to augment lung TRM responses.

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Paik, D. H., & Farber, D. L. (2021). Influenza infection fortifies local lymph nodes to promote lung-resident heterosubtypic immunity. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 218(1). https://doi.org/10.1084/JEM.20200218

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