Temporal profiling of human lymphoid tissues reveals coordinated defence to viral challenge
Coates, M. L.; Richoz, N.; Tuong, Z. K.; Bowyer, G.; Lee, C. Y. C.; Ferdinand, J. R.; Gillman, E.; McClure, M.; Di Marco Barros, R.; Stewart, B. J.; Clatworthy, M. R.
Show abstract
Adaptive immunity is generated in lymphoid organs, but how these structures defend themselves during infection in humans is unknown. The nasal epithelium is a major site of viral entry, with adenoid nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT) generating early adaptive responses. Here, using a nasopharyngeal biopsy, we examined longitudinal immune responses in NALT following viral challenge, using SARS-CoV-2 infection as a natural experimental model. In acute infection, infiltrating monocytes formed a subepithelial and peri-follicular shield, recruiting NET-forming neutrophils, whilst tissue macrophages expressed pro-repair molecules during convalescence to promote the restoration of tissue integrity. Germinal centre B cells expressed anti-viral transcripts that inversely correlated with fate-defining transcription factors. Among T cells, tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells alone showed clonal expansion and maintained cytotoxic transcriptional programmes into convalescence. Together our study provides a unique insight into how human nasal adaptive immune responses are generated and sustained in the face of viral challenge.
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