COVID-19
Laura F. Su, MD. PhD.
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Laurent bartolo, PhD.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Sumbul Afroz, PhD.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Yi-Gen Pan, PhD.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Ruozhang Xu, n/a
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Lea Williams, n/a
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Chin-Fang Lin, n/a
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Elliot Friedman, PhD.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Phyllis Gimotty, Ph.D.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Gary Wu, MD.
University of Pennsylvania
philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
The baseline composition of T cells directly impacts later response to a pathogen, but the complexity of precursor states remains poorly defined. Here we examined the baseline state of SARS-CoV-2 specific T cells in unexposed individuals. SARS-CoV-2 specific CD4+ T cells were identified in pre-pandemic blood samples by class II peptide-MHC tetramer staining and enrichment. Our data revealed a substantial number of SARS-CoV-2 specific T cells that expressed memory phenotype markers, including memory cells with gut homing receptors. T cell clones generated from tetramer-labeled cells cross-reacted with bacterial peptides and responded to stool lysates in a MHC-dependent manner. Integrated phenotypic analyses revealed additional precursor diversity that included T cells with distinct polarized states and trafficking potential to other barrier tissues. Our findings illustrate a complex pre-existing memory pool poised for immunologic challenges and implicate non-infectious stimuli from commensal colonization as a factor that shapes pre-existing immunity.