Distinct time effects of vaccination on long-term proliferative and IFN-γ-producing T cell memory to smallpox in humans

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Abstract

Residual immunity to the smallpox virus raises key questions about the persistence of long-term immune memory in the absence of antigen, since vaccination ended in 1980. IFN-γ-producing effector-memory and proliferative memory T cells were compared in 79 vaccinees 13-25 yr after their last immunization and in unvaccinated individuals. Only 20% of the vaccinees displayed both immediate IFN-γ-producing effector-memory responses and proliferative memory responses at 6 d; 52.5% showed only proliferative responses; and 27.5% had no detectable vaccinia-specific responses at all. Both responses were mediated by CD4 and CD8 T cells. The vaccinia-specific IFN-γ-producing cells were composed mainly of CD4Pos CD45RANeg CD11aHi CD27Pos and CCR7Neg T cells. Their frequency was low but could be expanded in vitro within 7 d. Time since first immunization affected their persistence: they vanished 45 yr after priming, but proliferative responses remained detectable. The number of recalls did not affect the persistence of residual effector-memory T cells. Programmed revaccination boosted both IFN-γ and proliferative responses within 2 mo of recall, even in vaccinees with previously undetectable residual effector-memory cells. Such long-term maintenance of vaccinia-specific immune memory in the absence of smallpox virus modifies our understanding of the mechanism of persistence of long-term memory to poxviruses and challenges vaccination strategies.

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Combadiere, B., Boissonnas, A., Carcelain, G., Lefranc, E., Samri, A., Bricaire, F., … Autran, B. (2004). Distinct time effects of vaccination on long-term proliferative and IFN-γ-producing T cell memory to smallpox in humans. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 199(11), 1585–1593. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20032083

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