46 research outputs found

    Circulating effector Ī³Ī“ T cell populations are associated with acute coronavirus disease 19 in unvaccinated individuals

    Get PDF
    Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSā€CoVā€2) infection causes severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDā€19) in a small proportion of infected individuals. The immune system plays an important role in the defense against SARSā€CoVā€2, but our understanding of the cellular immune parameters that contribute to severe COVIDā€19 disease is incomplete. Here, we show that populations of effector Ī³Ī“ T cells are associated with COVIDā€19 in unvaccinated patients with acute disease. We found that circulating CD27negCD45RA+CX3CR1+ VĪ“1effector cells expressing Granzymes (Gzms) were enriched in COVIDā€19 patients with acute disease. Moreover, higher frequencies of GzmB+ VĪ“2+ T cells were observed in acute COVIDā€19 patients. SARSā€CoVā€2 infection did not alter the Ī³Ī“ T cell receptor repertoire of either VĪ“1+ or VĪ“2+ subsets. Our work demonstrates an association between effector populations of Ī³Ī“ T cells and acute COVIDā€19 in unvaccinated individuals

    SJS/TEN 2019: From science to translation.

    Get PDF
    Stevens-Johnson syndrome and toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN) are potentially life-threatening, immune-mediated adverse reactions characterized by widespread erythema, epidermal necrosis, and detachment of skin and mucosa. Efforts to grow and develop functional international collaborations and a multidisciplinary interactive network focusing on SJS/TEN as an uncommon but high burden disease will be necessary to improve efforts in prevention, early diagnosis and improved acute and long-term management. SJS/TEN 2019: From Science to Translation was a 1.5-day scientific program held April 26-27, 2019, in Vancouver, Canada. The meeting successfully engaged clinicians, researchers, and patients and conducted many productive discussions on research and patient care needs

    CD8+ TĀ cells specific for an immunodominant SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid epitope display high naive precursor frequency and TCR promiscuity

    Get PDF
    To better understand primary and recall T cell responses during coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), it is important to examine unmanipulated severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-specific T cells. By using peptide-human leukocyte antigen (HLA) tetramers for direct ex vivo analysis, we characterized CD8+ T cells specific for SARS-CoV-2 epitopes in COVID-19 patients and unexposed individuals. Unlike CD8+ T cells directed toward subdominant epitopes (B7/N257, A2/S269, and A24/S1,208) CD8+ T cells specific for the immunodominant B7/N105 epitope were detected at high frequencies in pre-pandemic samples and at increased frequencies during acute COVID-19 and convalescence. SARS-CoV-2-specific CD8+ T cells in pre-pandemic samples from children, adults, and elderly individuals predominantly displayed a naive phenotype, indicating a lack of previous cross-reactive exposures. T cell receptor (TCR) analyses revealed diverse TCRĪ±Ī² repertoires and promiscuous Ī±Ī²-TCR pairing within B7/N105+CD8+ T cells. Our study demonstrates high naive precursor frequency and TCRĪ±Ī² diversity within immunodominant B7/N105-specific CD8+ T cells and provides insight into SARS-CoV-2-specific T cell origins and subsequent responses

    Robust SARS-CoV-2 TĀ cell responses with common TCR?? motifs toward COVID-19 vaccines in patients with hematological malignancy impacting B cells

    Get PDF
    Immunocompromised hematology patients are vulnerable to severe COVID-19 and respond poorly to vaccination. Relative deficits in immunity are, however, unclear, especially after 3 vaccine doses. We evaluated immune responses in hematology patients across three COVID-19 vaccination doses. Seropositivity was low after a first dose of BNT162b2 and ChAdOx1 (āˆ¼26%), increased to 59%ā€“75% after a second dose, and increased to 85% after a third dose. While prototypical antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) and T follicular helper (Tfh) cell responses were elicited in healthy participants, hematology patients showed prolonged ASCs and skewed Tfh2/17 responses. Importantly, vaccine-induced expansions of spike-specific and peptide-HLA tetramer-specific CD4+/CD8+ T cells, together with their T cell receptor (TCR) repertoires, were robust in hematology patients, irrespective of B cell numbers, and comparable to healthy participants. Vaccinated patients with breakthrough infections developed higher antibody responses, while T cell responses were comparable to healthy groups. COVID-19 vaccination induces robust T cell immunity in hematology patients of varying diseases and treatments irrespective of B cell numbers and antibody response

    Updates in SJS/TEN: collaboration, innovation, and community

    Get PDF
    Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis (SJS/TEN) is a predominantly drug-induced disease, with a mortality rate of 15ā€“20%, that engages the expertise of multiple disciplines: dermatology, allergy, immunology, clinical pharmacology, burn surgery, ophthalmology, urogynecology, and psychiatry. SJS/TEN has an incidence of 1ā€“5/million persons per year in the United States, with even higher rates globally. One of the challenges of SJS/TEN has been developing the research infrastructure and coordination to answer questions capable of transforming clinical care and leading to improved patient outcomes. SJS/TEN 2021, the third research meeting of its kind, was held as a virtual meeting on August 28ā€“29, 2021. The meeting brought together 428 international scientists, in addition to a community of 140 SJS/TEN survivors and family members. The goal of the meeting was to brainstorm strategies to support the continued growth of an international SJS/TEN research network, bridging science and the community. The community workshop section of the meeting focused on eight primary themes: mental health, eye care, SJS/TEN in children, non-drug induced SJS/TEN, long-term health complications, new advances in mechanisms and basic science, managing long-term scarring, considerations for skin of color, and COVID-19 vaccines. The meeting featured several important updates and identified areas of unmet research and clinical need that will be highlighted in this white paper

    Benzylpenicillin (penicillin G)

    No full text
    Penicillin was isolated from Penicillium notatum by Fleming in 1928 and introduced into clinical medicine in 1941 by Florey, Chain, and associates (Fleming, 1929; Chain et al., 1940; Abraham, 1980). The history of penicillin is recorded in a number of monographs (Hare, 1970; Bickel, 1972; Bud, 2007)
    corecore