作者
Leslie Chan,Kassandra Pinedo,Mikayla A. Stabile,Rebecca E. Hamlin,S. Pienkos,Kalani Ratnasiri,Samuel Yang,Andra L. Blomkalns,Kari C. Nadeau,Bali Pulendran,Ruth O’Hara,Angela J. Rogers,Susan Holmes,Catherine A. Blish,Thanmayi Ranganath,Nancy Q. Zhao,Aaron J. Wilk,Rosemary Vergara,Julia L. McKechnie,Lauren de la Parte,Kathleen D. Press,Maureen Ty,Nimish Kathale,Giovanny J. Martínez-Colón,Arjun Rustagi,Geoffrey T. Ivison,Ruoxi Pi,Madeline Lee,Rachel Brewer,Taylor Hollis,Andrea Baird,Michele Ugur,Michal Caspi Tal,Drina Bogusch,Georgie Nahass,Kazim Haider,Kim Q.T. Tran,Laura J. Simpson,Hena Din,Jonasel Roque,Rosen Mann,Iris Chang,Evan Do,Andrea Fernandes,Shu‐Chen Lyu,Wenming Zhang,Monali Manohar,James Krempski,Anita Visweswaran,Elizabeth J. Zudock,Kathryn Jee,Komal Kumar,Jennifer A. Newberry,James Quinn,Donald Schreiber,Euan A. Ashley
摘要
At this stage in the COVID-19 pandemic, most infections are "breakthrough" infections that occur in individuals with prior severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) exposure. To refine long-term vaccine strategies against emerging variants, we examined both innate and adaptive immunity in breakthrough infections. We performed single-cell transcriptomic, proteomic, and functional profiling of primary and breakthrough infections to compare immune responses from unvaccinated and vaccinated individuals during the SARS-CoV-2 Delta wave. Breakthrough infections were characterized by a less activated transcriptomic profile in monocytes and natural killer cells, with induction of pathways limiting monocyte migratory potential and natural killer cell proliferation. Furthermore, we observed a female-specific increase in transcriptomic and proteomic activation of multiple innate immune cell subsets during breakthrough infections. These insights suggest that prior SARS-CoV-2 vaccination prevents overactivation of innate immune responses during breakthrough infections with discernible sex-specific patterns and underscore the potential of harnessing vaccines in mitigating pathologic immune responses resulting from overactivation.