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

Authors :
Noemia S. Lima
Maryam Musayev
Timothy S. Johnston
Danielle A. Wagner
Amy R. Henry
Lingshu Wang
Eun Sung Yang
Yi Zhang
Kevina Birungi
Walker P. Black
Sijy O’Dell
Stephen D. Schmidt
Damee Moon
Cynthia G. Lorang
Bingchun Zhao
Man Chen
Kristin L. Boswell
Jesmine Roberts-Torres
Rachel L. Davis
Lowrey Peyton
Sandeep R. Narpala
Sarah O’Connell
Leonid Serebryannyy
Jennifer Wang
Alexander Schrager
Chloe Adrienna Talana
Geoffrey Shimberg
Kwanyee Leung
Wei Shi
Rawan Khashab
Asaf Biber
Tal Zilberman
Joshua Rhein
Sara Vetter
Afeefa Ahmed
Laura Novik
Alicia Widge
Ingelise Gordon
Mercy Guech
I-Ting Teng
Emily Phung
Tracy J. Ruckwardt
Amarendra Pegu
John Misasi
Nicole A. Doria-Rose
Martin Gaudinski
Richard A. Koup
Peter D. Kwong
Adrian B. McDermott
Sharon Amit
Timothy W. Schacker
Itzchak Levy
John R. Mascola
Nancy J. Sullivan
Chaim A. Schramm
Daniel C. Douek
Source :
Nature Communications. 13
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 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.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....224b943096e3f9d3fe608d982cef0bff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-35456-2