Abstract
Mucosal infections are prevented by a specialized local immune system. Immune cells of this compartment can also be found in the blood and are characterized by the expression of mucosa-specific homing molecules. Here, the cellular immune responses after inactivated poliovirus immunization (IPV) in poliovirus orally pre-immunized donors were investigated. Subcutaneous IPV induced a transient increase in the proliferative response against poliovirus antigen and in the number of poliovirus-specific CD4+ T cells in the blood of the vaccinees. These cells were characterized to be of the effector memory type (CD45RA-/CD45RO+/CCR7-/CD27+ and expressed the homing molecule α4β7, indicating their origin from the gut. Together these data show the recurrence of gut-derived poliovirus-specific cells upon IPV and evaluate the whole-blood assay as a powerful tool for monitoring the success of a vaccination. © 2004 SGM.
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CITATION STYLE
Krieg, C., Maier, R., & Meyerhans, A. (2004). Gut-homing (α4β7+) Th1 memory responses after inactivated poliovirus immunization in poliovirus orally pre-immunized donors. Journal of General Virology, 85(6), 1571–1579. https://doi.org/10.1099/vir.0.79919-0
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