Helminth exposure protects against murine SARS-CoV-2 infection through macrophage dependent T cell activation.

蠕虫暴露可通过巨噬细胞依赖性 T 细胞活化来保护小鼠免受 SARS-CoV-2 感染

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作者:Hilligan Kerry L, Oyesola Oyebola O, Namasivayam Sivaranjani, Howard Nina, Clancy Chad S, Oland Sandra D, Garza Nicole L, Lafont Bernard A P, Johnson Reed F, Mayer-Barber Katrin D, Sher Alan, Loke P'ng
Helminth endemic regions report lower COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. Here, we show that lung remodeling from a prior infection with a lung migrating helminth, Nippostrongylus brasiliensis , enhances viral clearance and survival of human-ACE2 transgenic mice challenged with SARS-CoV-2 (SCV2). This protection is associated with a lymphocytic infiltrate including an increased accumulation of pulmonary SCV2-specific CD8+ T cells and anti-CD8 antibody depletion abrogated the N. brasiliensis -mediated reduction in viral loads. Pulmonary macrophages with a type-2 transcriptional signature persist in the lungs of N. brasiliensis exposed mice after clearance of the parasite and establish a primed environment for increased antigen presentation. Accordingly, depletion of macrophages ablated the augmented viral clearance and accumulation of CD8+ T cells driven by prior N. brasiliensis infection. Together, these findings support the concept that lung migrating helminths can limit disease severity during SCV2 infection through macrophage-dependent enhancement of anti-viral CD8+ T cell responses.

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