Sepsis Leads to Lasting Changes in Phenotype and Function of Memory CD8 T Cells
Authors
Affiliations
The global health burden due to sepsis and the associated cytokine storm is substantial. While early intervention has improved survival during the cytokine storm, those that survive can enter a state of chronic immunoparalysis defined by transient lymphopenia and functional deficits of surviving cells. Memory CD8 T cells provide rapid cytolysis and cytokine production following re-encounter with their cognate antigen to promote long-term immunity, and CD8 T cell impairment due to sepsis can pre-dispose individuals to re-infection. While the acute influence of sepsis on memory CD8 T cells has been characterized, if and to what extent pre-existing memory CD8 T cells recover remains unknown. Here, we observed that central memory CD8 T cells (T) from septic patients proliferate more than those from healthy individuals. Utilizing LCMV immune mice and a CLP model to induce sepsis, we demonstrated that T proliferation is associated with numerical recovery of pathogen-specific memory CD8 T cells following sepsis-induced lymphopenia. This increased proliferation leads to changes in composition of memory CD8 T cell compartment and altered tissue localization. Further, memory CD8 T cells from sepsis survivors have an altered transcriptional profile and chromatin accessibility indicating long-lasting T cell intrinsic changes. The sepsis-induced changes in the composition of the memory CD8 T cell pool and transcriptional landscape culminated in altered T cell function and reduced capacity to control infection. Thus, sepsis leads to long-term alterations in memory CD8 T cell phenotype, protective function and localization potentially changing host capacity to respond to re-infection.
Unique lymphocyte transcriptomic profiles in septic patients with chronic critical illness.
Barrios E, Balzano-Nogueira L, Polcz V, Rodhouse C, Leary J, Darden D Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1478471.
PMID: 39691721 PMC: 11649506. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1478471.
The potential immunological mechanisms of sepsis.
Zhang X, Zhang Y, Yuan S, Zhang J Front Immunol. 2024; 15:1434688.
PMID: 39040114 PMC: 11260823. DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1434688.
SARS-CoV-2 inflammation durably imprints memory CD4 T cells.
Gray-Gaillard S, Solis S, Chen H, Monteiro C, Ciabattoni G, Samanovic M Sci Immunol. 2024; 9(96):eadj8526.
PMID: 38905326 PMC: 11824880. DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.adj8526.
Silva E, Moioffer S, Hassert M, Berton R, Smith M, van de Wall S J Immunol. 2023; 212(4):563-575.
PMID: 38149923 PMC: 10872354. DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.2300434.
Qu G, Liu H, Li J, Huang S, Zhao N, Zeng L Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):11358.
PMID: 37443372 PMC: 10345139. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-32992-9.