Department of Microbiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Laboratory of Viral Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
J Virol. 2024 Sep 17;98(9):e0076624. doi: 10.1128/jvi.00766-24. Epub 2024 Aug 28.
Antibody responses to influenza vaccines tend to be focused on epitopes encountered during prior influenza exposures, with little production of responses to novel epitopes. To examine the contribution of circulating antibodies to this phenomenon, we passively transferred a hemagglutinin (HA)-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) into mice before immunizing with whole inactivated virions. The HA mAb inhibited HA-specific antibodies, plasmablasts, germinal center B cells, and memory B cells, while responses to a second antigen in the vaccine, neuraminidase (NA), were uninhibited. The HA mAb potently inhibited antibody responses against epitopes near the HA mAb binding site. The HA mAb also promoted IgG1 class switching, an effect that, unlike the inhibition of HA responses, relied on signaling through Fc-gamma receptors. These studies suggest that circulating antibodies inhibit B cell responses in an antigen-specific manner, which likely contributes to differences in antibody specificities elicited during primary and secondary influenza virus exposures.IMPORTANCEMost humans are exposed to influenza viruses in childhood and then subsequently exposed to antigenically drifted influenza variants later in life. It is unclear if antibodies elicited by earlier influenza virus exposures impact immunity against new influenza virus strains. Here, we used a mouse model to investigate how an anti-hemagglutinin (HA) monoclonal antibody (mAb) affects B cell and antibody responses to the protein targeted by the monoclonal antibody (HA) and a second protein not targeted by the monoclonal antibody [neuraminidase (NA)]. Collectively, our studies suggest that circulating anti-influenza virus antibodies can potently modulate the magnitude and specificity of antibody responses elicited by secondary influenza virus exposures.
抗体对流感疫苗的反应往往集中在先前流感暴露时遇到的表位上,而对新表位的反应产生较少。为了研究循环抗体对此现象的贡献,我们在用全灭活病毒粒子免疫之前将血凝素 (HA) 特异性单克隆抗体 (mAb) 被动转移到小鼠体内。HA mAb 抑制了 HA 特异性抗体、浆母细胞、生发中心 B 细胞和记忆 B 细胞,而对疫苗中第二种抗原神经氨酸酶 (NA) 的反应不受抑制。HA mAb 强烈抑制了与 HA mAb 结合位点附近表位的抗体反应。HA mAb 还促进了 IgG1 类转换,与抑制 HA 反应不同,这种效应依赖于 Fc-γ 受体的信号转导。这些研究表明,循环抗体以抗原特异性方式抑制 B 细胞反应,这可能导致在原发性和继发性流感病毒暴露期间引起的抗体特异性差异。
重要性
大多数人在儿童时期接触流感病毒,然后在以后的生活中接触到抗原漂移的流感变异株。目前尚不清楚早期流感病毒暴露引起的抗体是否会影响对新流感病毒株的免疫力。在这里,我们使用小鼠模型研究了抗血凝素 (HA) 单克隆抗体 (mAb) 如何影响针对单克隆抗体 (HA) 靶向的蛋白和未针对单克隆抗体靶向的第二种蛋白 [神经氨酸酶 (NA)] 的 B 细胞和抗体反应。总之,我们的研究表明,循环抗流感病毒抗体可以强烈调节二次流感病毒暴露引起的抗体反应的幅度和特异性。