bioRxiv. 2026 Mar 19. pii: 2026.03.17.712383. [Epub ahead of print]
Elisa J M Raineri,
Caroline Boulouis,
Elli Mouchtaridi,
Vera Nilsén,
Curtis Cai,
Tobias Kammann,
Juliette Tabusse,
Takuya Sekine,
Nicole Wild,
Christian Constantz,
Eoghann White,
Thomas R Müller,
Anne Marchalot,
Sabrina Ferreira,
Jyotsana Kaushal,
Akhirunnesa Mily,
Miriam Franklin,
Elena Bonaiti,
Mary-Lyn Eichhorn,
John Bassett,
Chris Stamper,
Jeffrey Y W Mak,
David P Fairlie,
Chris Tibbitt,
Anna Norrby-Teglund,
Nicole Marquardt,
Jenny Mjösberg,
Carl Jorns,
Jenny Driving,
Edwin Leeansyah,
Marcus Buggert,
Johan K Sandberg.
Mucosa-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are unconventional T cells with innate-like rapid antimicrobial effector functions and serve as resident sentinels at mucosal and non-mucosal barriers. However, their role in immune defense against Staphylococcus aureus and the impact of bacterial immune evasion mechanisms are incompletely understood. Here, we have investigated MAIT cell responses to S. aureus and the impact of its broadly expressed leukocidin toxin HlgAB on MAIT cell responses in different human tissue sites. MAIT cells respond to S. aureus with a complex polyfunctional profile spanning pro-inflammatory IL-17, TNF, and IFNγ, anti-inflammatory IL-10, plus granzymes A, B, and K, perforin, and granulysin. The quality of responses was influenced by microbial dose and time of exposure and was dependent on both MR1-presented antigen and cytokine co-activation. CD56⁺ MAIT cells displayed stronger effector responses and higher HlgAB sensitivity compared to CD56⁻ cells. MAIT cells were partially resistant to HlgAB-toxicity compared to monocytes; blood-derived MAIT cells remained susceptible, whereas tonsillar MAIT cells showed minimal sensitivity. Notably, activation reduced the MAIT cell susceptibility to HlgAB, and such activation also afforded indirect protection to monocytes in co-cultures. The reduced susceptibility of tonsillar MAIT cells correlated with lower CCR2 and CXCR1 expression, a pattern shared with barrier tissues such as the lung and intestines. In conclusion, these findings indicate that MAIT cells exhibit tissue- and context-dependent responses to S. aureus and sensitivity to HlgAB-mediated immune evasion.
Importance: MAIT cells are an evolutionarily conserved unconventional T cell subset that responds to riboflavin pathway-derived antigens from a range of microbes. Here, we found that the human MAIT cell response to the pathogen S. aureus is robust with a polyfunctional complexity influenced by bacterial concentration and response kinetics. The ubiquitously expressed S. aureus immune-evasive toxin HlgAB attacks MAIT cells via CCR2. However, the sensitivity of MAIT cells to HlgAB varies depending on tissue localization, where in particular tissue-resident MAIT cells in tonsils are resistant. Antigen-specific activation of MAIT cells reduces HlgAB sensitivity, with protection also afforded to monocytes in the vicinity. These findings uncover the complex and dynamic interaction between an evolutionarily conserved arm of immunity, and immune evasion mechanisms of the important pathogen S. aureus .