Memory B cells in the lung participate in protective humoral immune responses to pulmonary influenza virus reinfection

After pulmonary virus infection, virus-binding B cells ectopically accumulate in the lung. However, their contribution to protective immunity against reinfecting viruses remains unknown. Here, we show the phenotypes and protective functions of virus-binding memory B cells that persist in the lung fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2012-02, Vol.109 (7), p.2485-2490
Hauptverfasser: Onodera, Taishi, Takahashi, Yoshimasa, Yokoi, Yusuke, Ato, Manabu, Kodama, Yuichi, Hachimura, Satoshi, Kurosaki, Tomohiro, Kobayashi, Kazuo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:After pulmonary virus infection, virus-binding B cells ectopically accumulate in the lung. However, their contribution to protective immunity against reinfecting viruses remains unknown. Here, we show the phenotypes and protective functions of virus-binding memory B cells that persist in the lung following pulmonary infection with influenza virus. A fraction of virus-binding B-cell population in the lung expressed surface markers for splenic mature memory B cells (CD73, CD80, and CD273) along with CD69 and CXCR3 that are up-regulated on lung effector/memory T cells. The lung B-cell population with memory phenotype persisted for more than 5 mo after infection, and on reinfection promptly differentiated into plasma cells that produced virus-neutralizing antibodies locally. This production of local IgG and IgA neutralizing antibody was correlated with reduced virus spread in adapted hosts. Our data demonstrates that infected lungs harbor a memory B-cell subset with distinctive phenotype and ability to provide protection against pulmonary virus reinfection.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1115369109