Shared B cell memory to coronaviruses and other pathogens varies in human age groups and tissues

Vaccination and infection promote the formation, tissue distribution, and clonal evolution of B cells, which encode humoral immune memory. We evaluated pediatric and adult blood and deceased adult organ donor tissues to determine convergent antigen-specific antibody genes of similar sequences shared...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2021-05, Vol.372 (6543), p.738-741
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Fan, Nielsen, Sandra C A, Hoh, Ramona A, Röltgen, Katharina, Wirz, Oliver Fabian, Haraguchi, Emily, Jean, Grace H, Lee, Ji-Yeun, Pham, Tho D, Jackson, Katherine J L, Roskin, Krishna M, Liu, Yi, Nguyen, Khoa, Ohgami, Robert S, Osborne, Eleanor M, Nadeau, Kari C, Niemann, Claus U, Parsonnet, Julie, Boyd, Scott D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vaccination and infection promote the formation, tissue distribution, and clonal evolution of B cells, which encode humoral immune memory. We evaluated pediatric and adult blood and deceased adult organ donor tissues to determine convergent antigen-specific antibody genes of similar sequences shared between individuals. B cell memory varied for different pathogens. Polysaccharide antigen-specific clones were not exclusive to the spleen. Adults had higher clone frequencies and greater class switching in lymphoid tissues than blood, while pediatric blood had abundant class-switched convergent clones. Consistent with reported serology, prepandemic children had class-switched convergent clones to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 with weak cross-reactivity to other coronaviruses, while adult blood or tissues showed few such clones. These results highlight the prominence of early childhood B cell clonal expansions and cross-reactivity for future responses to novel pathogens.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.abf6648