Vaccination in humans generates broad T cell cytokine responses

SC De Rosa, FX Lu, J Yu, SP Perfetto… - The Journal of …, 2004 - journals.aai.org
SC De Rosa, FX Lu, J Yu, SP Perfetto, J Falloon, S Moser, TG Evans, R Koup, CJ Miller
The Journal of Immunology, 2004journals.aai.org
In recent years, the quantification of T cell responses to pathogens or immunogens has
become a common tool in the evaluation of disease pathogenesis or vaccine
immunogenicity. Such measurements are usually limited to enumerating IFN-γ-producing
cells after ex vivo stimulation with Ag, but little is known about the phenotype or complete
functional repertoire of the Ag-specific cells. We used 12-color flow cytometry to characterize
Ag-specific T cells elicited by vaccines or natural infection to determine lineage and …
Abstract
In recent years, the quantification of T cell responses to pathogens or immunogens has become a common tool in the evaluation of disease pathogenesis or vaccine immunogenicity. Such measurements are usually limited to enumerating IFN-γ-producing cells after ex vivo stimulation with Ag, but little is known about the phenotype or complete functional repertoire of the Ag-specific cells. We used 12-color flow cytometry to characterize Ag-specific T cells elicited by vaccines or natural infection to determine lineage and differentiation status as well as the capacity to produce four cytokines (IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-2, and IL-4) and a chemokine (MIP1β). As expected, responding cells had a typical memory phenotype; however, the cytokine profiles associated with the responses were highly complex. The pattern of cytokine coexpression in response to specific Ags was a skewed subset of the complete repertoire (revealed by polyclonal stimulation). We found significant differences in the patterns of cytokines elicited by vaccination (where IFN-γ was by far a subdominant response) vs natural infection; in addition, there was fairly significant intersubject variation. Our findings illustrate the limitation of the evaluation of immune responses using single functional measurements (such as IFN-γ); in fact, it is likely that sensitive evaluation of Ag-specific T cells will require the coordinate measurement of several cytokines. The presence and variability of these complex response profiles introduce the possibility that selective functional expression patterns may provide correlates for vaccine efficacy or disease progression.
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