Back to Search Start Over

Primary exposure to SARS-CoV-2 variants elicits convergent epitope specificities, immunoglobulin V gene usage and public B cell clones.

Authors :
Lima NS
Musayev M
Johnston TS
Wagner DA
Henry AR
Wang L
Yang ES
Zhang Y
Birungi K
Black WP
O'Dell S
Schmidt SD
Moon D
Lorang CG
Zhao B
Chen M
Boswell KL
Roberts-Torres J
Davis RL
Peyton L
Narpala SR
O'Connell S
Serebryannyy L
Wang J
Schrager A
Talana CA
Shimberg G
Leung K
Shi W
Khashab R
Biber A
Zilberman T
Rhein J
Vetter S
Ahmed A
Novik L
Widge A
Gordon I
Guech M
Teng IT
Phung E
Ruckwardt TJ
Pegu A
Misasi J
Doria-Rose NA
Gaudinski M
Koup RA
Kwong PD
McDermott AB
Amit S
Schacker TW
Levy I
Mascola JR
Sullivan NJ
Schramm CA
Douek DC
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2022 Dec 14; Vol. 13 (1), pp. 7733. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 14.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

An important consequence of infection with a SARS-CoV-2 variant is protective humoral immunity against other variants. However, the basis for such cross-protection at the molecular level is incompletely understood. Here, we characterized the repertoire and epitope specificity of antibodies elicited by infection with the Beta, Gamma and WA1 ancestral variants and assessed their cross-reactivity to these and the more recent Delta and Omicron variants. We developed a method to obtain immunoglobulin sequences with concurrent rapid production and functional assessment of monoclonal antibodies from hundreds of single B cells sorted by flow cytometry. Infection with any variant elicited similar cross-binding antibody responses exhibiting a conserved hierarchy of epitope immunodominance. Furthermore, convergent V gene usage and similar public B cell clones were elicited regardless of infecting variant. These convergent responses despite antigenic variation may account for the continued efficacy of vaccines based on a single ancestral variant.<br /> (© 2022. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36517467
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-35456-2