Pigs lacking Natural Killer T cells have altered cellular responses to influenza
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It is increasingly recognized that innate T cells such as natural killer T (NKT) cells, mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells, and γδ T cells play an important role in shaping adaptive immune responses following influenza infection or vaccination. This is largely through the multiple cytokines these cells release upon activation, which have downstream effects on the scope and magnitude of virus-specific T and B cells, and antibodies which form. Here, we examined the contribution of NKT cells using pigs, which are considered a highly translational model of human influenza A infection. CD1D -expressing and CD1D -deficient pigs that respectively possess and lack NKT cells were infected with the swine influenza virus H3N2 A/Swine/Colorado/23619/1999 (CO99), with or without prior mucosal immunization with a recombinant H3N2 A/Swine/Texas/4199-2/1998 (TX98) modified live vaccine encoding a truncated NS1 protein (TX98 NS1Δ126). Vaccination reduced virus load and pulmonary pathology by similar amounts in both genotypes. However, NKT cells status had a significant impact on the underlying immune response: Unlike following vaccination, virus-specific T cell expansion after infection was greater in CD1D -deficient than -intact pigs, indicating that NKT cells play opposing roles in different phases of the immune response. NKT cell-deficient pigs also had reduced T cells cuffing around airways and higher numbers of expanded T and B cell clones according to single-cell αβ T cell receptor (TCR) and B cell receptor (BCR) sequencing. Using our newly developed porcine-specific γ and δ chain primers, we characterized the pulmonary γδ TCR repertoire. This revealed a high frequency of expanded clones, especially within the CD2 − subset, and a tendency for larger expansion in NKT cell-expressing pigs. Overall, our results indicate a homeostatic role for NKT cells on several important features of the influenza immune response, including the dynamics of T cell expansion and contraction.