4.7 Article

Evolution of functional antibodies following acute Epstein-Barr virus infection

Journal

PLOS PATHOGENS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010738

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard
  2. Samana Cay MGH scholar program
  3. Harvard University Center for AIDS Research Scholars Program [P30 AI060354-02]
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences [UL1TR002544]

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Although Epstein-Barr virus primarily causes asymptomatic infections, it can also lead to associated diseases. However, the antibody function during EBV infection is relatively limited compared to other viral infections, possibly due to the virus transitioning from lytic to latent stages.
While Epstein-Barr virus causes mostly asymptomatic infection, associated malignancies, and autoimmune and lymphoproliferative diseases occur. To dissect the evolution of humoral immune responses over the course of EBV infection and to gain a better understanding of the potential contribution of antibody (Ab) function to viral control, we comprehensively profiled Ab specificities and Fc-functionalities using systems serology and VirScan. Ab functions against two early (p18 and p47/54) and two latent (gp350/220 and EBNA-1) EBV proteins were overall modest and/or short-lived, differing from humoral responses induced during acute infection by other viruses such as HIV. In the first year post infection, only p18 elicited robust IgM-driven complement deposition and IgG-driven neutrophil phagocytosis while responses against EBNA-1 were largely Fc-functionally silent and only matured during chronic infection to drive phagocytosis. In contrast, Abs against Influenza virus readily mediated broad Fc-activity in all participants. These data suggest that EBV evades the induction of robust Fc-functional Abs, potentially due to the virus' life cycle, switching from lytic to latent stages during infection.

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