📄 Anti-severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus immune responses: The role played by Vγ9Vδ2 T cells
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is caused by a novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV) strain. Analyses of T cell repertoires in health care workers who survived SARS-CoV infection during the 2003 outbreak revealed that their effector memory Vγ9Vδ2 T cell populations were selectively expanded ∼3 months after the onset of disease. No such expansion of their αβ T cell pools was detected. The expansion of the Vγ9Vδ2 T cell population was associated with higher anti-SARS-CoV immunoglobulin G titers. In addition, in vitro experiments demonstrated that stimulated Vγ9Vδ2 cells display an interferon-γ-dependent anti-SARS-CoV activity and are able to directly kill SARS-CoV-infected target cells. These findings are compatible with the possibility that Vγ9Vδ2 T cells play a protective role during SARS. © 2006 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
keywords
🔗 novel coronavirus (684)
🔗 respiratory syndrome (2004)
🔗 acute respiratory (1734)
🔗 health care (123)
author
👤 Poccia, Fabrizio
👤 Agrati, Chiara
👤 Castilletti, Concetta
👤 Bordi, Licia
👤 Gioia, Cristiana
👤 Horejsh, Douglas
👤 Ippolito, Giuseppe
👤 Chan, Paul K.S.
👤 Hui, David S.C.
👤 Sung, Joseph J.Y.
👤 Capobianchi, Maria Rosaria
👤 Malkovsky, Miroslav
year
⏰ 2006
journal
📚 Journal of Infectious Diseases
issn
🗄 00221899
volume
193
number
9
page
1244-1249
citedbycount
25
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