T-Cell Responses after Rotavirus Infection or Vaccination in Children: A Systematic Review
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viruses
Abstract
Cellular immunity against rotavirus in children is incompletely understood. This review
describes the current understanding of T-cell immunity to rotavirus in children. A systematic
literature search was conducted in Embase, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Global Health databases
using a combination of “t-cell”, “rotavirus” and “child” keywords to extract data from relevant articles
published from January 1973 to March 2020. Only seventeen articles were identified. Rotavirusspecific
T-cell immunity in children develops and broadens reactivity with increasing age. Whilst
occurring in close association with antibody responses, T-cell responses are more transient but can
occur in absence of detectable antibody responses. Rotavirus-induced T-cell immunity is largely
of the gut homing phenotype and predominantly involves Th1 and cytotoxic subsets that may be
influenced by IL-10 Tregs. However, rotavirus-specific T-cell responses in children are generally of
low frequencies in peripheral blood and are limited in comparison to other infecting pathogens and
in adults. The available research reviewed here characterizes the T-cell immune response in children.
There is a need for further research investigating the protective associations of rotavirus-specific T-cell
responses against infection or vaccination and the standardization of rotavirus-specific T-cells assays
in children.
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Research Article