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[Preprint]. 2023 Sep 1:2023.08.31.555772. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.08.31.555772

Sequential early-life viral infections modulate the microbiota and adaptive immune responses to systemic and mucosal vaccination

Yuhao Li, Jerome M Molleston, Andrew H Kim, Harshad Ingle, Somya Aggarwal, Lila S Nolan, Ahmed O Hassan, Lynne Foster, Michael S Diamond, Megan T Baldridge
PMCID: PMC10491206  PMID: 37693434

Abstract

Increasing evidence points to the microbial exposome as a critical factor in maturing and shaping the host immune system, thereby influencing responses to immune challenges such as infections or vaccines. To investigate the effect of early-life viral exposures on immune development and vaccine responses, we inoculated mice with six distinct viral pathogens in sequence beginning in the neonatal period, and then evaluated their immune signatures before and after intramuscular or intranasal vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. Sequential viral infection drove profound changes in all aspects of the immune system, including increasing circulating leukocytes, altering innate and adaptive immune cell lineages in tissues, and markedly influencing serum cytokine and total antibody levels. Beyond these immune responses changes, these exposures also modulated the composition of the endogenous intestinal microbiota. Although sequentially-infected mice exhibited increased systemic immune activation and T cell responses after intramuscular and intranasal SARS-CoV-2 immunization, we observed decreased vaccine-induced antibody responses in these animals. These results suggest that early-life viral exposures are sufficient to diminish antibody responses to vaccination in mice, and highlight their potential importance of considering prior microbial exposures when investigating vaccine responses.

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