Pertussis is still occurring in highly vaccinated populations, affecting individuals of all ages. Long-lived Th1 CD4+ T cells are essential for protective immunity against pertussis. For better understanding of the limited immunological memory to Bordetella pertussis, we used a panel of Pertactin and Pertussis toxin specific peptides to interrogate CD4+ T cell responses at the epitope level in a unique cohort of symptomatic pertussis patients of different ages, at various time intervals after infection. Our study showed that pertussis epitope-specific T cell responses contained Th1 and Th2 components irrespective of the epitope studied, time after infection, or age. In contrast, the breadth of the pertussis-directed CD4+ T cell response seemed dependent on age and closeness to infection. Multi-epitope specificity long-term after infection was lost in older age groups. Detailed knowledge on pertussis specific immune mechanisms and their insufficiencies is important for understanding resurgence of pertussis in highly vaccinated populations. © 2013 Han et al.
CITATION STYLE
Han, W. G. H., Van Twillert, I., Poelen, M. C. M., Helm, K., Van De Kassteele, J., Verheij, T. J. M., … Van Els, C. A. C. M. (2013). Loss of multi-epitope specificity in memory CD4+ T cell responses to B. Pertussis with age. PLoS ONE, 8(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083583
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