Longitudinal analysis of acute and convalescent B cell responses in a human primary dengue serotype 2 infection model

在人类原发性登革热2型感染模型中,对急性期和恢复期B细胞反应进行纵向分析

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作者:Usha K Nivarthi,Huy A Tu,Matthew J Delacruz,Jesica Swanstrom,Bhumi Patel,Anna P Durbin,Stephen S Whitehead,Kristen K Pierce,Beth D Kirkpatrick,Ralph S Baric,Ngan Nguyen,Daniel E Emerling,Aravinda M de Silva,Sean A Diehl

Abstract

Background: Acute viral infections induce a rapid and transient increase in antibody-secreting plasmablasts. At convalescence, memory B cells (MBC) and long-lived plasma cells (LLPC) are responsible for long-term humoral immunity. Following an acute viral infection, the specific properties and relationships between antibodies produced by these B cell compartments are poorly understood. Methods: We utilized a controlled human challenge model of primary dengue virus serotype 2 (DENV2) infection to study acute and convalescent B-cell responses. Findings: The level of DENV2 replication was correlated with the magnitude of the plasmablast response. Functional analysis of plasmablast-derived monoclonal antibodies showed that the DENV2-specific response was dominated by cells producing DENV2 serotype-specific antibodies. DENV2-neutralizing antibodies targeted quaternary structure epitopes centered on domain III of the viral envelope protein (EDIII). Functional analysis of MBC and serum antibodies from the same subjects six months post-challenge revealed maintenance of the serotype-specific response in both compartments. The serum response mainly targeted DENV2 serotype-specific epitopes on EDIII. Interpretation: Our data suggest overall functional alignment of DENV2-specific responses from the plasmablast, through the MBC and LLPC compartments following primary DENV2 inflection. These results provide enhanced resolution of the temporal and specificity of the B cell compartment in viral infection and serve as framework for evaluation of B cell responses in challenge models. Funding: This study was supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

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