Temporal dynamics of persistent germinal centers and memory B cell differentiation following respiratory virus infection
Abstract
Following infection or immunization, memory B cells (MBCs) and long-lived plasma cells provide humoral immunity that can last for decades. Most principles of MBC biology have been determined with hapten-protein carrier models or fluorescent protein immunizations. Here, we examine the temporal dynamics of the germinal center (GC) B cell and MBC response following mouse influenza A virus infection. We find that antiviral B cell responses within the lung-draining mediastinal lymph node (mLN) and the spleen are distinct in regard to duration, enrichment for antigen-binding cells, and class switching dynamics. While splenic GCs dissolve after 6 weeks post-infection, mLN hemagglutinin-specific (HA(+)) GCs can persist for 22 weeks. Persistent GCs continuously differentiate MBCs, with "peak"and "late"GCs contributing equal numbers of HA(+) MBCs to the long-lived compartment. Our findings highlight critical aspects of persistent GC responses and MBC differentiation following respiratory virus infection with direct implications for developing effective vaccination strategies.
Citation
Cell Reports, 37 (6), 19, 109961
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022Author
Yewdell, W. T.
Smolkin
Belcheva
Mendoza
Michaels
Cols
Angeletti, Davide
Yewdell
Chaudhuri
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
Language
eng