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    Mucosal and Systemic Responses to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Vaccination Determined by Severity of Primary Infection.

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    Author
    Sajadi, Mohammad M
    Myers, Amber
    Logue, James
    Saadat, Saman
    Shokatpour, Narjes
    Quinn, James
    Newman, Michelle
    Deming, Meagan
    Rikhtegaran Tehrani, Zahra
    Magder, Laurence S
    Karimi, Maryam
    Abbasi, Abdolrahim
    Shlyak, Mike
    Baracco, Lauren
    Frieman, Matthew B
    Crotty, Shane
    Harris, Anthony D
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    Date
    2022-11-02
    Journal
    mSphere
    Type
    Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    See at
    https://doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00279-22
    Abstract
    With much of the world infected with or vaccinated against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (commonly abbreviated SARS-CoV-2; abbreviated here SARS2), understanding the immune responses to the SARS2 spike (S) protein in different situations is crucial to controlling the pandemic. We studied the clinical, systemic, mucosal, and cellular responses to two doses of SARS2 mRNA vaccines in 62 individuals with and without prior SARS2 infection that were divided into three groups based on antibody serostatus prior to vaccination and/or degree of disease symptoms among those with prior SARS2 infection: antibody negative (naive), low symptomatic, and symptomatic. Antibody negative were subjects who were antibody negative (i.e., those with no prior infection). Low symptomatic subjects were those who were antibody negative and had minimal or no symptoms at time of SARS2 infection. Symptomatic subjects were those who were antibody positive and symptomatic at time of SARS2 infection. All three groups were then studied when they received their SARS2 mRNA vaccines. In the previously SARS2-infected (based on antibody test) low symptomatic and symptomatic groups, reactogenic symptoms related to a recall response were elicited after the first vaccination. Anti-S trimer IgA and IgG titers, and neutralizing antibody titers, peaked after the 1st vaccination in the previously SARS2-infected groups and were significantly higher than for the SARS2 antibody-negative group in the plasma and nasal samples at most time points. Nasal and plasma IgA antibody responses were significantly higher in the low symptomatic group than in the symptomatic group at most time points. After the first vaccination, differences in cellular immunity were not evident between groups, but the activation-induced cell marker (AIM+) CD4+ cell response correlated with durability of IgG humoral immunity against the SARS2 S protein. In those SARS2-infected subjects, severity of infection dictated plasma and nasal IgA responses in primary infection as well as response to vaccination (peak responses and durability), which could have implications for continued protection against reinfection. Lingering differences between the SARS2-infected and SARS2-naive up to 10 months postvaccination could explain the decreased reinfection rates in the SARS2-infected vaccinees recently reported and suggests that additional strategies (such as boosting of the SARS2-naive vaccinees) are needed to narrow the differences observed between these groups. IMPORTANCE This study on SARS2 vaccination in those with and without previous exposure to the virus demonstrates that severity of infection dictates IgA responses in primary infection as well as response to vaccination (peak responses and durability), which could have implications for continued protection against reinfection.
    Keyword
    IgA
    IgG
    SARS-CoV-2
    mucosal immunity
    systemic response
    vaccination
    Identifier to cite or link to this item
    http://hdl.handle.net/10713/20127
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1128/msphere.00279-22
    Scopus Count
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    UMB Coronavirus Publications
    UMB Open Access Articles

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