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Parenteral vaccination protects against transcervical infection with Chlamydia trachomatis and generate tissue-resident T cells post-challenge

Nina Dieu Nhien Tran Nguyen, Anja Weinreich Olsen, Emma Lorenzen, Peter Andersen, Malene Hvid, Frank Follmann, Jes Dietrich

2020npj Vaccines39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The optimal protective immunity against Chlamydia trachomatis ( C.t.) is still not fully resolved. One of the unresolved issues concerns the importance of resident immunity, since a recent study showed that optimal protection against a transcervical (TC) infection required genital tissue-resident memory T cells. An important question in the Chlamydia field is therefore if a parenteral vaccine strategy, inducing only circulating immunity primed at a nonmucosal site, should be pursued by Chlamydia vaccine developers. To address this question we studied the protective efficacy of a parenteral Chlamydia vaccine, formulated in the Th1/Th17 T cell-inducing adjuvant CAF01. We found that a parenteral vaccination induced significant protection against a TC infection and against development of chronic pathology. Protection correlated with rapid recruitment of Th1/Th17 T cells to the genital tract (GT), which efficiently prevented infection-driven generation of low quality Th1 or Th17 T cells, and instead maintained a pool of high quality multifunctional Th1/Th17 T cells in the GT throughout the infection. After clearance of the infection, a pool of these cells settled in the GT as tissue-resident Th1 and Th17 cells expressing CD69 but not CD103, CD49d, or CCR7, where they responded rapidly to a reinfection. These results show that a nonmucosal parenteral strategy inducing Th1 and Th17 T cells mediates protection against both infection with C.t . as well as development of chronic pathology, and lead to post-challenge protective tissue-resident memory immunity in the genital tract.

Topics & Concepts

Chlamydia trachomatisVaccinationChlamydiaChlamydia trachomatis infectionVirologyChlamydial infectionMedicineImmunologyMicrobiologyBiologyReproductive tract infections researchReproductive System and PregnancyCervical Cancer and HPV Research