Elsevier

Mucosal Immunology

Volume 7, Issue 1, January 2014, Pages 89-100
Mucosal Immunology

Article
Harnessing alveolar macrophages for sustained mucosal T-cell recall confers long-term protection to mice against lethal influenza challenge without clinical disease

https://doi.org/10.1038/mi.2013.27Get rights and content
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Abstract

Vaccines that induce T cells, which recognize conserved viral proteins, could confer universal protection against seasonal and pandemic influenza strains. An effective vaccine should generate sufficient mucosal T cells to ensure rapid viral control before clinical disease. However, T cells may also cause lung injury in influenza, so this approach carries inherent risks. Here we describe intranasal immunization of mice with a lentiviral vector expressing influenza nucleoprotein (NP), together with an NFκB activator, which transduces over 75% of alveolar macrophages (AM). This strategy recalls and expands NP-specific CD8+ T cells in the lung and airway of mice that have been immunized subcutaneously, or previously exposed to influenza. Granzyme B-high, lung-resident T-cell populations persist for at least 4 months and can control a lethal influenza challenge without harmful cytokine responses, weight loss, or lung injury. These data demonstrate that AM can be harnessed as effective antigen-presenting cells for influenza vaccination.

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Published online: 29 May 2013

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL is linked to the online version of the paper

M K Collins and WM C Rosenberg: These authors contributed equally to this work.

Supplementary information The online version of this article (doi:10.1038/mi.2013.27) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.