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Publication : Affinity-Restricted Memory B Cells Dominate Recall Responses to Heterologous Flaviviruses.

First Author  Wong R Year  2020
Journal  Immunity Volume  53
Issue  5 Pages  1078-1094.e7
PubMed ID  33010224 Mgi Jnum  J:297378
Mgi Id  MGI:6478174 Doi  10.1016/j.immuni.2020.09.001
Citation  Wong R, et al. (2020) Affinity-Restricted Memory B Cells Dominate Recall Responses to Heterologous Flaviviruses. Immunity 53(5):1078-1094.e7
abstractText  Memory B cells (MBCs) can respond to heterologous antigens either by molding new specificities through secondary germinal centers (GCs) or by selecting preexisting clones without further affinity maturation. To distinguish these mechanisms in flavivirus infections and immunizations, we studied recall responses to envelope protein domain III (DIII). Conditional deletion of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) between heterologous challenges of West Nile, Japanese encephalitis, Zika, and dengue viruses did not affect recall responses. DIII-specific MBCs were contained mostly within the plasma-cell-biased CD80(+) subset, and few GCs arose following heterologous boosters, demonstrating that recall responses are confined by preexisting clonal diversity. Measurement of monoclonal antibody (mAb) binding affinity to DIII proteins, timed AID deletion, single-cell RNA sequencing, and lineage tracing experiments point to selection of relatively low-affinity MBCs as a mechanism to promote diversity. Engineering immunogens to avoid this MBC diversity may facilitate flavivirus-type-specific vaccines with minimized potential for infection enhancement.
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