Although influenza viruses lead to severe illness in high-risk populations, host genetic factors associated with severe disease are largely unknown. As the HLA-A*68:01 allele can be linked to severe pandemic 2009-H1N1 disease, we investigate a potential impairment of HLA-A*68:01-restricted CD8 + T cells to mount robust responses. We elucidate the HLA-A*68:01 + CD8 + T cell response directed toward an extended influenza-derived nucleoprotein (NP) peptide and show that only ~35% individuals have immunodominant A68/NP 145 + CD8 + T cell responses. Dissecting A68/NP 145 + CD8 + T cells in low vs. medium/high responders reveals that high responding donors have A68/NP 145 + CD8 + memory T cells with clonally expanded TCRαβs, while low-responders display A68/NP 145 + CD8 + T cells with predominantly naïve phenotypes and non-expanded TCRαβs. Single-cell index sorting and TCRαβ analyses link expansion of A68/NP 145 + CD8 + T cells to their memory potential. Our study demonstrates the immunodominance potential of influenza-specific CD8 + T cells presented by a risk HLA-A*68:01 molecule and advocates for priming CD8 + T cell compartments in HLA-A*68:01-expressing individuals for establishment of pre-existing protective memory T cell pools. The HLA-A*68:01 allele has been associated with severe influenza disease during the 2009 influenza pandemic. Here, the authors analyze influenza nucleoprotein specific HLA-A*68:01-restricted CD8 + T cells from human donors and show immunodominance of these cells in approximately 35% of HLA-A*68:01-expressing donors.
【저자키워드】 Influenza virus, Antimicrobial responses, Antigen presentation, CD8-positive T cells,