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Convergent antibody signatures in human dengue

Authors :
Poornima Parameswaran
Karen L. Artiles
Kim R. McGowan
Birgitte B. Simen
Ji-Yeun Lee
Katherine K.L. Jackson
Nader Pourmand
Angel Balmaseda
Simona Zompi
Scott D. Boyd
Eva Harris
Krishna M. Roskin
Yi Liu
Andrew Fire
Daphne Koller
Maria José Vargas
Bozena Hanczaruk
Muhammad Tariq
Vaishali P. Dixit
Source :
Cell hostmicrobe. 13(6)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

SummaryDengue is the most prevalent mosquito-borne viral disease in humans, and the lack of early prognostics, vaccines, and therapeutics contributes to immense disease burden. To identify patterns that could be used for sequence-based monitoring of the antibody response to dengue, we examined antibody heavy-chain gene rearrangements in longitudinal peripheral blood samples from 60 dengue patients. Comparing signatures between acute dengue, postrecovery, and healthy samples, we found increased expansion of B cell clones in acute dengue patients, with higher overall clonality in secondary infection. Additionally, we observed consistent antibody sequence features in acute dengue in the highly variable major antigen-binding determinant, complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3), with specific CDR3 sequences highly enriched in acute samples compared to postrecovery, healthy, or non-dengue samples. Dengue thus provides a striking example of a human viral infection where convergent immune signatures can be identified in multiple individuals. Such signatures could facilitate surveillance of immunological memory in communities.

Details

ISSN :
19346069
Volume :
13
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell hostmicrobe
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b3908ca09f0037a7db9ac4f9a804760