Decrease in measles virus-specific CD4 T cell memory in vaccinated subjects

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Abstract

Since the licensure and generalization of an effective measles virus (MV) vaccine 41 years ago, antibody levels have been used as correlates of immunity. The long-lived MV-specific antibody response has been studied intensely, but the dynamics of MV-specific T cell immunity over time have not been well characterized. We thus characterized the profiles of MV vaccine-induced antigen-specific T cells over time since vaccination. In a cross-sectional study of healthy subjects with a history of MV vaccination, we found that MV-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells could be detected up to 34 years after vaccination. The levels of MV-specific CD8 T cells and MV-specific IgG remained stable, whereas the level of MV-specific CD4 T cells decreased significantly in subjects who had been vaccinated >21 years earlier. These results show that MV-specific T cell immunity after vaccination is long lasting and reveal different dynamics between CD4 and CDS cells after vaccination.

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Naniche, D., Garenne, M., Rae, C., Manchester, M., Buchta, R., Brodine, S. K., & Oldstone, M. B. A. (2004). Decrease in measles virus-specific CD4 T cell memory in vaccinated subjects. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 190(8), 1387–1395. https://doi.org/10.1086/424571

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