Distinct germinal center selection at local sites shapes memory B cell response to viral escape

Respiratory influenza virus infection induces cross-reactive memory B cells targeting invariant regions of viral escape mutants. However, cellular events dictating the cross-reactive memory B cell responses remain to be fully defined. Here, we demonstrated that lung-resident memory compartments at t...

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Published inThe Journal of experimental medicine Vol. 212; no. 10; pp. 1709 - 1723
Main Authors Adachi, Yu, Onodera, Taishi, Yamada, Yuki, Daio, Rina, Tsuiji, Makoto, Inoue, Takeshi, Kobayashi, Kazuo, Kurosaki, Tomohiro, Ato, Manabu, Takahashi, Yoshimasa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States The Rockefeller University Press 21.09.2015
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Summary:Respiratory influenza virus infection induces cross-reactive memory B cells targeting invariant regions of viral escape mutants. However, cellular events dictating the cross-reactive memory B cell responses remain to be fully defined. Here, we demonstrated that lung-resident memory compartments at the site of infection, rather than those in secondary lymphoid organs, harbor elevated frequencies of cross-reactive B cells that mediate neutralizing antibody responses to viral escape. The elevated cross-reactivity in the lung memory compartments was correlated with high numbers of VH mutations and was dependent on a developmental pathway involving persistent germinal center (GC) responses. The persistent GC responses were focused in the infected lungs in association with prolonged persistence of the viral antigens. Moreover, the persistent lung GCs supported the exaggerated B cell proliferation and clonal selection for cross-reactive repertoires, which served as the predominant sites for the generation of cross-reactive memory progenitors. Thus, we identified the distinct GC selection at local sites as a key cellular event for cross-reactive memory B cell response to viral escape, a finding with important implications for developing broadly protective influenza vaccines.
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K. Kobayashi’s present address is Sakai City Institute of Public Health, Sakai, Osaka 590-0953, Japan.
ISSN:0022-1007
1540-9538
1540-9538
DOI:10.1084/jem.20142284