4.8 Article

Two complementary features of humoral immune memory confer protection against the same or variant antigens

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2205598119

关键词

affinity maturation; immune memory; antibody response; vaccine; virus

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [U19AI057229]
  2. Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital
  3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  4. Harvard

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The humoral immune response relies on B cells and antibodies to provide immune protection. Memory B cells play a crucial role in reinfection or booster vaccination. Selective expansion of memory B cells with high affinity outside germinal centers results in a rapid production of optimal antibodies upon reexposure to the same antigen. Memory B cells that enter secondary germinal centers can undergo mutation and selection, leading to more potent immune responses over time. The diversity of memory B cells generated in germinal centers is important in providing protection against variant antigens.
The humoral immune response, a key arm of adaptive immunity, consists of B cells and their products. Upon infection or vaccination, B cells undergo a Darwinian evolutionary process in germinal centers (GCs), resulting in the production of antibodies and memory B cells. We developed a computational model to study how humoral memory is recalled upon reinfection or booster vaccination. We find that upon reexposure to the same antigen, affinity-dependent selective expansion of available memory B cells outside GCs (extragerminal center compartments [EGCs]) results in a rapid response made up of the best available antibodies. Memory B cells that enter secondary GCs can undergo mutation and selection to generate even more potent responses over time, enabling greater protection upon subsequent exposure to the same antigen. GCs also generate a diverse pool of B cells, some with low antigen affinity. These results are consistent with our analyses of data from humans vaccinated with two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine. Our results further show that the diversity of memory B cells generated in GCs is critically important upon exposure to a variant antigen. Clones drawn from this diverse pool that cross-react with the variant are rapidly expanded in EGCs to provide the best protection possible while new secondary GCs generate a tailored response for the new variant. Based on a simple evolutionary model, we suggest that the complementary roles of EGC and GC processes we describe may have evolved in response to complex organisms being exposed to evolving pathogen families for millennia.

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