key: cord-0010566-6rurgsiw authors: Uddbäck, Ida; Kohlmeier, Jacob E.; Thomsen, Allan R.; Christensen, Jan P. title: Harnessing Cross-Reactive CD8(+) T(RM) Cells for Long-Standing Protection Against Influenza A Virus date: 2020-04-01 journal: Viral Immunol DOI: 10.1089/vim.2019.0177 sha: 0cb4cf8a4ccbc21eb08f8e1f2443e10ee5cc6758 doc_id: 10566 cord_uid: 6rurgsiw nan A s of today, influenza A virus infection is very much a health issue for the human population. Over a 100 years have passed since the 1918 influenza pandemic that caused the deaths of tens of millions of people over the world, but despite this we have not been able to develop an efficient vaccine that can protect the population. Since they first became available, >60 years ago, commercial vaccines all primarily induce an antibody response targeting the surface glycoproteins hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA). The vaccine is the most effective method of protecting the population against influenza infection available today, nevertheless the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated the efficiency to be ranging between 20% and 60% over the last years (12, 33, 40, 48, 60) . The major underlying reason for this is the ever-evolving influenza A virus. Genetic drift results in changes of the surface proteins, making it impossible for antibodies to recognize and neutralize newly evolved virus. As a result, there is an annual need for re-evaluation and possibly re-formulation of the vaccine in an attempt to match the circulating strains. An alternative to the antibody-mediated immunity, targeting the variable HA and NA, is to induce cellular immunity targeting the highly conserved internal influenza proteins. Nineteen years ago from Peter C. Doherty's laboratory, Christensen et al. published a study illustrating the capacity and critical role of CD8 T cells in heterosubtypic protection, an article that has become one of the cornerstones when discussing the important role of CD8 T cells in cross protection against respiratory viruses (8) . The data presented in that article clearly demonstrated that by generating a large number of influenza-specific CD8 T cells, protection against influenza A challenge was improved, not only against homosubtypic strains, but also against heterosubtypic influenza strains where seroimmunity was lacking. Specifically, the T cell immune response was boosted by re-infection with serologically different influenza strains that shared the same CD8 T cell nucleoprotein (NP) epitope. When an influenzaspecific CD8 T cell population was present before challenge, limited expansion of the CD8 T cell population was required, thus not only protecting against the virus infection but also limiting immunopathology. The article also illustrated that pre-existing cellular immunity have limitations. Despite high numbers of cross-reactive CD8 T cells, present as early as 1-day postchallenge, viral titers did not differ from groups with no T cell immunity. This pinpointed another important fact, the CD8 T cell response will first be activated after the influenza virus has infected its host. Since this publication in 2000, substantial effort has been put into understanding the basic foundations necessary for designing a vaccine generating a long-lasting cross-protective CD8 T cell population. At the time point of the Christensen's article, memory T cells were considered to fall into two main categories, central memory or effector memory T cells. Central memory T cells, T CM , are located in the secondary lymphoid organs and the blood and are CD62L + CCR7 + cells. Effector memory cells, T EM , are circulating CD62L -CCR7cells surveying the blood and peripheral tissues. For a long period of time, all memory T cells were categorized into these two populations. However, since then groups studying memory T cells found that a population of the effector memory T cells were residing in the peripheral tissues and did not reenter the circulation (17, 32) . This memory population was coined tissue-resident memory T cells (T RM ) and have been identified in various tissue since including lungs, liver, intestine, and female reproductive tract and is identified by a high expression of CD69, and in many tissues also CD103 and CD49a (13, 19, 31, 43) . The crucial role that T RM cells play in cellular immunity against respiratory infections has become clear over the last decade. Several decades ago, early work on lung airway T cells unknowingly provided some of the first descriptions of tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells and their importance for protective immunity to heterosubtypic influenza challenge. One of these first studies by Christensen et al. that investigated airway memory T cells found that a single intraperitoneal priming regimen was inferior to an intraperitoneal-prime and intranasal-boost regimen for protection against a heterosubtypic influenza challenge (8) . Although this defect was originally attributed to differences in the number of circulating influenza-specific memory CD8 T cells between vaccination regimens, armed with current knowledge it is likely that the lack of influenza-specific memory CD8 T cells in the respiratory tract after intraperitoneal priming was also a major contributing factor (35, 41, 47) . Another early study provided the first evidence of a CD69 + ''resting'' influenza-specific memory CD8 T cell population in the airways that was highly prevalent on day 50 postinfection, but gradually disappeared over the next 3-4 months (30). It was not until the formal identification of T RM that the correlation between the gradual loss of influenza-specific memory CD8 T cells from the airways observed by Marshall et al. (30) , and the gradual decline in protective cellular immunity to heterosubtypic influenza infection, could be fully appreciated (27) . More recent studies have employed parabiosis and/or intravital labeling techniques to greatly expand our knowledge of the T RM population in the lung (1, 21) . Virus-specific lung T RM are essential for heterosubtypic immunity against influenza viruses, and the gradual decline in immunity over time parallels a gradual loss in lung T RM (56) . Lung T RM can be divided into two distinct subsets based on their localization in the interstitium or the airways. These unique microenvironments lead to different phenotypic and functional traits of interstitial and airway T RM , but both subsets contribute to antiviral immunity (36, 58) . Transcriptional analysis of lung T RM showed these cells have a similar core genetic signature to T RM in other peripheral tissues, such as the skin, gut, and genital tract (23, 29) . However, unlike T RM in other sites, the requirements for establishment of T RM in the lung, and the longevity of these cells in the tissue, are unique. Several reports have shown the generation of lung T RM requires that activated effector T cells re-encounter their specific antigen in the lung tissue (35, 41, 47) . This has important implications for vaccination strategies, as intramuscular (i.m.) or subcutaneous vaccines that fail to traffic antigen to the lungs are unlikely to generate airway or interstitial T RM in sufficient numbers for cellular immune protection. Another critical difference between T RM in the lungs versus other tissues is the gradual decay of the T RM pool in both the airways and the interstitium. Although the mechanisms driving this loss are not fully understood, lung T RM showed increased apoptosis under steady-state conditions compared to circulating T EM (44) . In addition, airway T RM were more prone to cell death than interstitial T RM due to the limited nutrients available in the airway environment (Uddbäck et al, in preparation; and S. Hayward et al, in preparation). Although these findings would suggest that vaccines designed to generate lung T RM would offer only transient protection, several reports have described mechanisms that can improve the longevity of lung T RM . Repeated boosting of virus-specific cells resulted in decreased apoptosis and prolonged maintenance of lung T RM under steady-state conditions (51) . It has also been shown that lung T RM preferentially reside in areas of tissue repair within the lung, and a more natural pathogen exposure history may generate or maintain these niches to support T RM persistence (47) . Developing a better understanding of the interplay between lung T RM and their local environment will be essential for developing strategies to improve their longevity. Apart from understanding T cell memory populations and how the cellular immunity will provide cross protection, it is crucial during vaccine design to select the right targets for the immune response. Long-lasting influenzaspecific memory T cells have been found in peripheral blood from human blood donors up to at least 13 years after the influenza infection (52) . These long-lived T cells were still functional and produced interferon gamma (IFNc) upon ex vivo stimulation. While all of the internal proteins of influenza are highly conserved relative to the surface protein HA and NA (42) , not all will serve as good targets for inducing an immune response. NP, polymerase acid (PA), polymerase basic protein 1 (PB1), PB2, and matrix protein 1 (M1) have been researched as potential targets with varying results. NP is by far the most investigated target as the CD8 + T cell response to influenza A infections in both mice and humans is primarily dominated by an NP-specific response (2, 55) . High number of NP-specific T cells can be found in spleen, mediastinal lymph node, airways, and lungs after a cleared influenza infection in mice, which provides researchers with a tool that at least in part is translatable to a human response. As Christensen et al. (8) illustrated in their article from 2000, this influenza specific population, when boosted to sufficient numbers, can provide protection against subsequent infection with heterosubtypic influenza strains. For a vaccine, viral vectors have been a popular approach used to induce a protective NP-specific response. Adenovirus and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) encoding the NP gene have both been successful at generating a NP-specific T cells response (15, 49) . The NPspecific cells generated in these studies were capable of protecting mice against both homosubtypic and heterosubtypic challenge, also in the absence of B cells. Due to the compiling studies clearly demonstrating NP as a frontrunner in the selection of relevant targets, NP will likely be included in the case of future T cell inducing vaccine. However, T cells are not infallible and if the majority of the CD8 T cell response is directed toward a single epitope that is mutated between influenza strains, T cells will fail to recognize and clear the virus (49) . Still, the risk of this happening is much lower compared to when targeting HA and NA, as the NP gene is highly conserved between influenza A strains. To some extent the high degree of conservation of the internal proteins between influenza strains can be explained by functional constraint (4) . Moreover, using mathematical modeling and mapping CD8 T cell NP epitopes in humans, Li et al. illustrated that the conservation is likely dependent on several aspects, including the fact that polymorphism of the human major histocompatibility complex-I gene restricts the advantage of a mutated strain to only a fraction of the human population carrying the relevant MHC-I alleles, and shows that other epitopes can compensate when infection occurs with mutated variants of the influenza virus (26) . The possibility of escape variants of the NP gene nevertheless stresses the need to investigate other target genes as a way to increase the breadth of the vaccine induced response and avoid immune escape. In a 2017 study from our research group, the immune response generated in response to vaccination with an adenoviral vector expressing PB1, a relatively poorly investigated target, was analyzed (50) . We found that by linking the PB1 gene to invariant chain in a nonreplicating adenovirus (AdIiPB1) (18) , vaccination induced high numbers of CD8 memory T cells that produced cytokines including IFNc in response to ex vivo stimulation with PB1 703-711 peptide (3). However, despite the high number of PB1specific memory T cells in C57BL/6 mice, AdIiPB1 vaccinated subjects only displayed 50% survival upon lethal challenge. The PB1-specific T cells generated showed low cytolytic capacity in vivo and after further investigation we found that the PB1 703-711 peptide-MHC complex had low stability over time, resulting in a very high concentration of peptide being required for activation of the T cells. This correlates with a previous study by Peter C. Doherty and Stephen Turners group demonstrating the connection between peptide-MHC stability and CD8 T cell activation (10) . Despite evidence that intra nasal priming route could improve the immunity to low avidity targets, also published by Peter C. Doherty in collaboration with Katherine Kedzierskas group, protective capacities by the T cells generated by AdIiPB1 vaccination in C57BL/6 mice was not sufficient despite an intra nasal priming route (53) . These results emphasized that many factors apart from cell numbers need to be considered when choosing a vaccine target. In addition to this, AdIiPB1 was less efficient at inducing high number of CD8 T cells in the lung and airways compared to adenoviruses expressing other genes such as NP and PA (Unpublished data). Further, a DNA vaccine expressing PB1 induced an immune response that could provide homosubtypic protection in Balb/C mice; however, cross-protective capacities of the immunity generated were never investigated (22) . Interestingly though, PB1 epitopes were identified as among the most prevalent in humans in a study from Assarsson et al. in 2008, and PB1 still has potential as a target, in particular if combined with other genes (2). Despite generating a significant response in mice, few PA epitopes are described in humans and PA has been poorly investigated as a target for an influenza vaccine. Encoded by an adenovirus, immunization with PA can generate an immune response and protect against influenza challenge in both C57BL/6 and Balb/C mice (Article in preparation). The PAspecific response observed in mice is not directly translatable to humans; however, it can still be used to understand dif-ferences in different antigen-specific responses. In addition, to broaden protection and reduce chance of immune escape by mutations, PA is of interest. M1 epitopes have also been identified at high frequencies in the human population and M1 has therefore been investigated as a vaccine target, both as a stand-alone but mainly in combination with NP (7, 28, 45) . One of the most successful trials have been a heterologous prime boost strategy where first immunization occurs with a chimpanzee adenovirus vector encoding NP+M1 fusion protein and a conserved part of the HA stalk (cH13/14), followed by boosting with a MVA vector encoding the same targets; using this approach vaccination have shown promising results in mice and ferrets (34) . Importantly, the MVA vaccine both with and without the addition of the AdNP+M1 has also been well tolerated in humans and significantly increased numbers of circulating? Memory T cells (5, 9) . Notably, in these studies the vaccines were administered i.m., the most common administration route in humans. In one initial study using the MVA+Ad vaccine regime in mice, an intranasal route was used for boosting with Ad after i.m. priming with MVA, and this induced higher number of antigen-specific cells in the BAL of mice, compared to a i.m. + i.m. delivery (24) . However, localized cellular immunity in response to the MVA+Ad vaccination regime has not been further implemented or investigated down the line and, as will be discussed below, it is likely that vaccination by the i.m. route, though established and practical, will not result in the most optimal protection possible. For a vaccine to generate the intended response, vaccination route needs to be carefully considered. Vaccination must not only deliver the vaccine in a safe manner for patients, but also be practical. Therefore, unnecessary painful routes or complicated regimes must be carefully evaluated before taken into use. As lung T RM cells are gaining increased attention, and compiling studies illustrates their importance for optimal cross protection in respiratory infection (36, 56) , a lot of recent immunization strategies have focused on the ability to induce a T RM population and how to make this population stable over time. As previously mentioned, the majority of data indicate that airway and lung interstitium T RM cells require local antigen for establishment, which means that the vaccine need to be administered locally into the airways (46) . Intranasal vaccination with an AdNP have successfully generated an influenzaspecific CD8 T cells response in the lungs that was able to provide cross protection against different influenza A strains (20) . However, it was never investigated how long the induced immunity lasted as viral challenge was performed 3 weeks after vaccination at the latest. Moreover, virus-like particles including epitopes from HA and M1 have also been used in intranasal vaccination to generate localized cross-reactive CD8 T cells, but again protection has been poorly investigated beyond a few months postvaccination (14) . The live attenuated influenza virus (LAIV) FluMist, is the only commercially available vaccine that is delivered locally into the airways in the form of a nose spray, demonstrating that intranasal application is possible also in humans. Even though the primary goal of FluMist has been to induce a B cell and antibody mediated immune response, it has also been investigated as a way to increase CD8 T cells with promising results (16, 57) . In addition, a PR8 LAIV has been studied and when administered intranasally, it has been found able to establish a CD8 T cell population in the lungs of mice, which was crucial for clearance of a heterosubtypic influenza challenge (54) . We showed, in 2016, that by immunizing with AdNP both intranasally and subcutaneously we could induce longlasting immunity in mice (Fig. 1) (49) . By combining the two vaccination routes, both a strong localized and central immune response was induced. The generated memory T cell populations were cross protective and protection lasted for at least 8 months. When the phenotype of the airway population was analyzed, a substantial part of the antigen-specific airway population expressed residency markers CD69 and CD103. Recently, we have been exploring the underlying reasons for this long-lasting protection, and we demonstrated that persistent antigen after adenovirus vaccination can maintain a lung T RM population long term (Fig. 2 ) (Article in preparation). Inflation, the concept that a small amount of persistent antigen can stimulate a T cell population without causing T cell exhaustion, has recently been gaining substantial attention and also how inflation can maintain the T RM population in the lungs and airways (6) . Except for adenovectors, intranasal vaccination with Murin Cytomegalovirus (MCMV) vectors has recently been explored as a method for generating and maintaining a T RM population by inflation long term (37, 38, 59) . However, as discussed earlier, cells in the lung and particularly the airways have a high rate of apoptosis and the time limit of the inflation process and the effect on the T RM population long term in the lungs has not been thoroughly studied. If and when the persistent antigen in the lungs is cleared, unless the population has permanently differentiated, the antigenspecific T RM cells will likely be lost within months. However, it has been suggested that, using a doxycyclineregulated adenovirus, the majority of programming occurs early after priming and if the antigen is removed later than 60 days after priming it has little or no effect on the memory population (11) . To obtain heterosubtypic immunity against influenza infections, memory T cells are highly likely to play an important role. T cell immunity will, however, not provide sterile immunity and to provide optimal protection, a vaccine likely also has to induce an antibody response. Several studies have been investigating a combination of T and B cell targets, with the MVA vector currently coming out as the frontrunner. One of the greatest challenges with a CD8 T cell inducing influenza vaccine is how to maintain a large enough CD8 T cells population in the respiratory system to have long-lasting protection. As discussed earlier, the antigen-specific population located in the airways is under particular stress, causing them to undergo apoptosis at a high rate. Several studies point to the importance of local antigen for the formation and maintenance of T RM and it is possible that extended exposure by persistent antigen or repeated antigen exposure can increase the survival of the T RM population (51) . It is reasonable to hypothesize that repeated antigen exposure and persistent antigen cause a similar result, namely an extended life span of the T RM population. How long the T RM population can be maintained in the lungs of humans still remains to be investigated and there is currently no solution to the high apoptosis rate of T RM population. One issue of translating mouse studies to humans is that most of murine studies are performed in mice with no pre-existing immunological memory toward influenza, and vaccination is usually not followed by any irrelevant infections. Both these scenarios are likely to occur in humans and to influence the formation and maintenance of the human lung T RM population and therefore needs to be further investigated. Methods to improve the T RM population by increasing the size, extending the life span and thereby heterosubtypic immunity has been explored by including adjuvant genes important for resident memory T cell formation and survival in the vaccines (25, 39) . However, these approaches have used self-molecules, 4-1BB and interleukin-1b, and the adverse effects needs to be carefully evaluated. Moreover, if the high apoptosis rate of the lung T RM population observed in multiple studies cannot be prevented, no matter how large a population we start out with, eventually the cells, and heterosubtypic protection, will be lost. Either scientist need to figure out a way to make the airway environment less stressful for the cells and reduce apoptosis, an unlikely scenario as this could affect other basic or immunological functions in the lung, or the T RM population needs to be replenished based on persistent antigen that can pull circulating T EM into the T RM population. If neither of these options will be possible, perhaps a universal one-time influenza vaccine is too much to ask for? No competing financial interests exist. 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