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Expansion of the HSV-2–specific T cell repertoire in skin after immunotherapeutic HSV-2 vaccine
Emily S. Ford, Alvason Z. Li, Kerry J. Laing, Lichun Dong, Kurt Diem, Lichen Jing, Koshlan Mayer-Blackwell, Krithi Basu, Mariliis Ott, Jim Tartaglia, Sanjay Gurunathan, Jack L. Reid, Matyas Ecsedi, Aude G. Chapuis, Meei-Li Huang, Amalia S. Magaret, Christine Johnston, Jia Zhu, David M. Koelle, Lawrence Corey
Emily S. Ford, Alvason Z. Li, Kerry J. Laing, Lichun Dong, Kurt Diem, Lichen Jing, Koshlan Mayer-Blackwell, Krithi Basu, Mariliis Ott, Jim Tartaglia, Sanjay Gurunathan, Jack L. Reid, Matyas Ecsedi, Aude G. Chapuis, Meei-Li Huang, Amalia S. Magaret, Christine Johnston, Jia Zhu, David M. Koelle, Lawrence Corey
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Research Article Vaccines Virology

Expansion of the HSV-2–specific T cell repertoire in skin after immunotherapeutic HSV-2 vaccine

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Abstract

The skin at the site of HSV-2 reactivation is enriched for HSV-2–specific T cells. To evaluate whether an immunotherapeutic vaccine could elicit skin-based memory T cells, we studied skin biopsies and HSV-2–reactive CD4+ T cells from PBMCs by T cell receptor (TCR) β chain (TRB) sequencing before and after vaccination with a replication-incompetent whole-virus HSV-2 vaccine candidate (HSV529). The representation of HSV-2–reactive CD4+ TRB sequences from PBMCs in the skin TRB repertoire increased after the first vaccine dose. We found sustained expansion after vaccination of unique, skin-based T cell clonotypes that were not detected in HSV-2–reactive CD4+ T cells isolated from PBMCs. In one participant, a switch in immunodominance occurred with the emergence of a TCR αβ pair after vaccination that was not detected in blood. This TCRαβ was shown to be HSV-2 reactive by expression of a synthetic TCR in a Jurkat-based NR4A1 reporter system. The skin in areas of HSV-2 reactivation possessed an oligoclonal TRB repertoire that was distinct from the circulation. Defining the influence of therapeutic vaccination on the HSV-2–specific TRB repertoire requires tissue-based evaluation.

Authors

Emily S. Ford, Alvason Z. Li, Kerry J. Laing, Lichun Dong, Kurt Diem, Lichen Jing, Koshlan Mayer-Blackwell, Krithi Basu, Mariliis Ott, Jim Tartaglia, Sanjay Gurunathan, Jack L. Reid, Matyas Ecsedi, Aude G. Chapuis, Meei-Li Huang, Amalia S. Magaret, Christine Johnston, Jia Zhu, David M. Koelle, Lawrence Corey

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Figure 4

Evaluation of TRA/TRB V and J gene usage.

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Evaluation of TRA/TRB V and J gene usage.
(A) V gene usage in participan...
(A) V gene usage in participants 1–6 across all sites, including blood, arm, and genital skin, over time. Pie charts demonstrate the proportion of the total repertoire represented by each gene. Skin site clonotypes were limited to those that were present at greater than 4 copies; all HSV-reactive CD4+ T cells from blood are shown. (B) Combination V and J gene usage in P4 showing the shift in immunodominance from 2 years prior to vaccination through 10 days after the first vaccine dose. The z axis represents numbers of copies in each combination. The x and y axes represent V and J genes listed sequentially. The V and J genes are labeled for the most abundant combinations. (C) HSV-2 specificity of a synthetic TCR composed of the most abundant TRA and TRB sequences from the day 10 sample in P4, using a Jurkat Nur77-mNeonGreen reporter cell system (right). Negative control (no TCR, left) and positive control (PMA + ionomycin, middle) for TCR stimulation and negative treatment (no HSV, top) or experimental treatment (UV-irradiated HSV, bottom) to assess TCR specificity. The star denotes the newly immunodominant TCR stimulated by vaccine in P4 (A and B) and shown to be HSV specific (C).

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