Personal tools
You are here: The Britz-McKibbin Laboratory > Publications > Parenteral BCG vaccine induces lung-resident memory macrophages and trained immunity via the gut–lung axis

Jeyanathan Mangalakumari, Maryam Vaseghi-Shanjani, Sam Afkhami, Jensine Grondin, Alisha Kang, Michael D’Agostino, Yushi Yao, Shreya Jain, Anna Zganiacz, Zachary Kroezen, Meera Shanmuganathan, Ramandeep Singh, Anna Dvorkin-Gheva, Philip Britz-McKibbin, Waliul Khan, and Zhou Xing (2022)

Parenteral BCG vaccine induces lung-resident memory macrophages and trained immunity via the gut–lung axis

Nature Immunology, 23:1687-1702.

Aside from centrally induced trained immunity in the bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood by parenteral vaccination or infection, evidence indicates that mucosal-resident innate immune memory can develop via a local infammatory pathway following mucosal exposure. However, whether mucosal-resident innate memory results from integrating distally generated immunological signals following parenteral vaccination/infection is unclear. Here we show that subcutaneous Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccination can induce memory alveolar macrophages (AMs) and trained immunity in the lung. Although parenteral BCG vaccination trains BM progenitors and circulating monocytes, induction of memory AMs is independent of circulating monocytes. Rather, parenteral BCG vaccination, via mycobacterial dissemination, causes a time-dependent alteration in the intestinal microbiome, barrier function and microbial metabolites, and subsequent changes in circulating and lung metabolites, leading to the induction of memory macrophages and trained immunity in the lung. These data identify an intestinal microbiota-mediated pathway for innate immune memory development at distal mucosal tissues and have implications for the development of next-generation vaccine strategies against respiratory pathogens.

Document Actions