SARS-CoV-2 (E)-protein induces rapid TLR2-mediated T cell activation in mouse lungs revealed by intravital lung microscopy
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Mounting evidence indicates that T cells can operate in an innate-like mode challenging the classical description of T cells as strictly adaptive immune effectors. T cells can engage innate pattern recognition receptors to mount rapid but antigen-nonspecific responses to infection or cellular stress. This study observed that CD8+ T cells, and to a lesser extent also CD4+ T cells, responded to viral proteins in the mouse lung quickly in an innate-like fashion.
We employed intravital lung microscopy to visualize infiltration of CD8+ T cells into the lung following intratracheal instillation of the SARS-CoV-2 envelope (E)-protein. Here, we demonstrate acute recruitment of CD8+ from the pulmonary microcirculation into the lung as early as 4 and 24 hours after (E)-protein instillation. The acute infiltration of CD8+ T cells was not observed in Tlr2 − / − mice. Immunohistochemistry analysis of mouse lungs revealed T cell accumulation in nodular inflammatory foci (NIF) of the lung at perivascular regions and around large airways. Stimulating spleen-derived CD8+ T cells from wild-type mice with (E)-protein ex vivo in combination with cytokines or TCR agonists significantly upregulated CD69 and activated secretion of interferon (IFN)γ which was not observed with CD8+ T cells isolated from Tlr2 − / − mice.
These findings indicate rapid bystander activation of CD8+ T cells by the SARS-CoV-2 envelope (E)-protein that depends on (E)-protein sensing by TLR2. This innate-like CD8+ T cell response to SARS-CoV-2 (E)-protein may offer novel opportunities for diagnostic and therapeutic development, warranting further investigation.