Discordant memory B cell and circulating anti-Env antibody responses in HIV-1 infection

Long-lived memory B cells (BMem) provide an archive of historic Ab responses. By contrast, circulating Abs typically decline once the immunogen is cleared. Consequently, circulating Abs can underestimate the nature of cognate humoral immunity. On the other hand, the BMem pool should provide a compre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2009-03, Vol.106 (10), p.3952-3957
Hauptverfasser: Guan, Yongjun, Sajadi, Mohammad M, Kamin-Lewis, Roberta, Fouts, Timothy R, Dimitrov, Anthony, Zhang, Zhixin, Redfield, Robert R, DeVico, Anthony L, Gallo, Robert C, Lewis, George K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Long-lived memory B cells (BMem) provide an archive of historic Ab responses. By contrast, circulating Abs typically decline once the immunogen is cleared. Consequently, circulating Abs can underestimate the nature of cognate humoral immunity. On the other hand, the BMem pool should provide a comprehensive picture of Ab specificities that arise over the entire course of infection. To test this hypothesis, we compared circulating Ab and BMem from natural virus suppressors who control HIV-1 without therapy and maintain a relatively intact immune system. We found high frequencies of BMem specific for the conserved neutralizing CD4 induced or CD4 binding site epitopes of gp120, whereas low Ab titers to these determinants were detected in contemporaneous plasma. These data suggest that plasma Ab repertoires can underestimate the breadth of humoral immunity, and analyses of BMem should be included in studies correlating Ab specificity with protective immunity to HIV-1.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0813392106