4.6 Article

Epitope-Specific Human Influenza Antibody Repertoires Diversify by B Cell Intraclonal Sequence Divergence and Interclonal Convergence

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 187, Issue 7, Pages 3704-3711

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1101823

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01 AI058113, R21AI085306, UL1RR029887]
  2. Department of Defense [HDTRA1-08-10-BRCWMD-BAA]
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [HHSN272200900047C]
  4. Cancer Center [CA068485]
  5. Vanderbilt Digestive Disease Research Center [DK058404]
  6. Vanderbilt Vision Research Center [EY008126]

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We generated from a single blood sample five independent human mAbs that recognized the Sa antigenic site on the head of influenza hemagglutinin and exhibited inhibitory activity against a broad panel of H1N1 strains. All five Abs used the V(H)3-7 and J(H)6 gene segments, but at least four independent clones were identified by junctional analysis. High-throughput sequence analysis of circulating B cells revealed that each of the independent clones were members of complex phylogenetic lineages that had diversified widely using a pattern of progressive diversification through somatic mutation. Unexpectedly, B cells encoding multiple diverging lineages of these clones, including many containing very few mutations in the Ab genes, persisted in the circulation. Conversely, we noted frequent instances of amino acid sequence convergence in the Ag combining sites exhibited by members of independent clones, suggesting a strong selection for optimal binding sites. We suggest that maintenance in circulation of a wide diversity of somatic variants of dominant clones may facilitate recognition of drift variant virus epitopes that occur in rapidly mutating virus Ags, such as influenza hemagglutinin. In fact, these Ab clones recognize an epitope that acquired three glycosylation sites mediating escape from previously isolated human Abs. The Journal of Immunology, 2011, 187: 3704-3711.

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