| Literature DB >> 31312199 |
Maria Auladell1, Xiaoxiao Jia1, Luca Hensen1, Brendon Chua1,2, Annette Fox3, Thi H O Nguyen1, Peter C Doherty1,4, Katherine Kedzierska1.
Abstract
Persistent and durable immunological memory forms the basis of any successful vaccination protocol. Generation of pre-existing memory B cell and T cell pools is thus the key for maintaining protective immunity to seasonal, pandemic and avian influenza viruses. Long-lived antibody secreting cells (ASCs) are responsible for maintaining antibody levels in peripheral blood. Generated with CD4+ T help after naïve B cell precursors encounter their cognate antigen, the linked processes of differentiation (including Ig class switching) and proliferation also give rise to memory B cells, which then can change rapidly to ASC status after subsequent influenza encounters. Given that influenza viruses evolve rapidly as a consequence of antibody-driven mutational change (antigenic drift), the current influenza vaccines need to be reformulated frequently and annual vaccination is recommended. Without that process of regular renewal, they provide little protection against "drifted" (particularly H3N2) variants and are mainly ineffective when a novel pandemic (2009 A/H1N1 "swine" flu) strain suddenly emerges. Such limitation of antibody-mediated protection might be circumvented, at least in part, by adding a novel vaccine component that promotes cross-reactive CD8+ T cells specific for conserved viral peptides, presented by widely distributed HLA types. Such "memory" cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) can rapidly be recalled to CTL effector status. Here, we review how B cells and follicular T cells are elicited following influenza vaccination and how they survive into a long-term memory. We describe how CD8+ CTL memory is established following influenza virus infection, and how a robust CTL recall response can lead to more rapid virus elimination by destroying virus-infected cells, and recovery. Exploiting long-term, cross-reactive CTL against the continuously evolving and unpredictable influenza viruses provides a possible mechanism for preventing a disastrous pandemic comparable to the 1918-1919 H1N1 "Spanish flu," which killed more than 50 million people worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; T cells; immunological memory; influenza; vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31312199 PMCID: PMC6614380 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Pathways to B cell memory. Naïve B cells become activated by direct recognition of antigens expressed on the surface of the pathogen. Top panel: Follicular (FO) naïve B cells become activated within the lymph node through a T cell-dependent pathway. CD4+ T cells become activated by recognizing viral peptides processed by FO dendritic cells and presented on their surface by MHC-II molecules. After becoming activated, both CD4+ T cells and B cells, travel to the T-B border in the lymph node, where they interact. Three outcomes can follow this interaction. (i) A germinal center (GC) is formed, CD4+ T cells polarize into T follicular helper (Tfh) cells and FO B cells differentiate into GC B cells. In the GC, B cells undergo rapid proliferation and somatic hypermutation of the Ig V regions in their B cell receptors (BCR), due to their interaction with Tfh cells through CD40-CD40L, PD1-PD-L1/L2, ICOS-ICOSL among others and the secretion of cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-21, affinity maturation takes place and those B cells that increase affinity toward their Ag are selected. Some of these B cells will also class-switch. These interactions result in the generation of IgM+ memory B cells (BMEM), IgG+/A+/E+ BMEM or IgG/A/E secreting long-lived plasma cells (LLPC) in this order in time. The later these cells are generated, the higher affinity and lesser cross-reactivity they have toward the antigen or antigen variants, respectively. (ii) Not all B cells enter the GC after interacting with their cognate activated CD4+ T cells in the T-B border, IgM+ BMEM and IgM secreting LLPCs are also generated outside of the GC, in a GC-independent (GCi) manner. (iii) Short-lived antibody secreting cells (ASC) are generated early after activation to generate a rapid response against the pathogen. These short-lived ASC will undergo apoptosis and do not contribute to the generation of B cell memory. Bottom panel: Some protein antigens provide highly repetitive antigenic structures, which induce strong BCR crosslinking. Viral single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) together with other danger signals also activate toll-like receptors such as TLR7. These strong signals are enough to activate B cells in a T cell-independent (TI) manner and generate short-lived IgM secreting ASC and IgM+ BMEM. B1b and marginal zone (MZ) B cells are activated in a TI manner and provide a faster response against the pathogen.
The clinical outcome and the B and T cell memory responses after exposure to influenza viruses are summarized below.
| Clinical outcome | Little to no symptoms | Unpredictable ( | Dependent of CD8+ T cell response | |
| B cell response | Robust memory B cell response and protective Ab production ( | Dominated by memory B cells against preserved antigenic sites, yielding a protective but focused Ab response that may not protect against future drift. | Cross-reactive memory B cells produce an early unadapted Ab response to limit virus replication and symptoms, and enter GC reactions to generate updated memory and PCs If enough Ag available, naïve B cells react and generate updated B cell memory | Very limited (if any) protection by memory B cells ( |
| CD8+ T cell response | Cross-reactive Not responsive if B cells neutralize the virus | Cross-reactive but not neutralizing immunityHost-specific differences | ||
Figure 2CD8+ T cell memory formation. Naïve CD8+ T cells become activated by recognition of viral peptides presented in the context of MHC-I molecules on the surface of virally-infected APCs. Activated CD8+ T cells divide and differentiate into effector CD8+ T cells, which kill virus-infected cells and secrete cytokines to induce an anti-viral milieu. After viral clearance, mainly KLRG1lo, ID3+, IL2Rα+, and CD62Lhi CD8+ T cells develop into CD8+ memory T cells, while the remaining ~90–95% of CD8+ T cells undergo apoptosis. Memory formation can be augmented by innate-like T cells (iNKT and MAIT cells). Memory CD8+ T cells are divided based on surface marker expression, known to impact their localization. While TCM and TEM can be found in blood and tissues, TRM reside at the site of infection where they can rapidly respond towards a secondary infection. TCM can be also found in lymph nodes and display higher proliferative capacity and IL-2 production compared to their TEM counterparts.