1. Atypical and non-classical CD45RBlo memory B cells are the majority of circulating SARS-CoV-2 specific B cells following mRNA vaccination or COVID-19.
- Author
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Priest, David G., Ebihara, Takeshi, Tulyeu, Janyerkye, Søndergaard, Jonas N., Sakakibara, Shuhei, Sugihara, Fuminori, Nakao, Shunichiro, Togami, Yuki, Yoshimura, Jumpei, Ito, Hiroshi, Onishi, Shinya, Muratsu, Arisa, Mitsuyama, Yumi, Ogura, Hiroshi, Oda, Jun, Okusaki, Daisuke, Matsumoto, Hisatake, and Wing, James B.
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IMMUNOLOGIC memory ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 vaccines ,SARS-CoV-2 ,CYTOMETRY ,B cells - Abstract
Resting memory B cells can be divided into classical or atypical groups, but the heterogenous marker expression on activated memory B cells makes similar classification difficult. Here, by longitudinal analysis of mass cytometry and CITE-seq data from cohorts with COVID-19, bacterial sepsis, or BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine, we observe that resting B cell memory consist of classical CD45RB
+ memory and CD45RBlo memory, of which the latter contains of two distinct groups of CD11c+ atypical and CD23+ non-classical memory cells. CD45RB levels remain stable in these cells after activation, thereby enabling the tracking of activated B cells and plasmablasts derived from either CD45RB+ or CD45RBlo memory B cells. Moreover, in both COVID-19 patients and mRNA vaccination, CD45RBlo B cells formed the majority of SARS-CoV2 specific memory B cells and correlated with serum antibodies, while CD45RB+ memory are activated by bacterial sepsis. Our results thus identify that stably expressed CD45RB levels can be exploited to trace resting memory B cells and their activated progeny, and suggest that atypical and non-classical CD45RBlo memory B cells contribute to SARS-CoV-2 infection and vaccination. Activated memory B cells express a variety of markers. Here, by mass cytometry and CITE-seq, the authors identify differential expression of CD45RB as a marker distinguishing classical and atypical/non-classical memory B cells, with the former being more prominent during sepsis, while the latter being more abundant in COVID-19 infection or vaccination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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