| Literature DB >> 33846272 |
Fan Yang1, Sandra C A Nielsen2, Ramona A Hoh2, Katharina Röltgen2, Oliver Fabian Wirz2, Emily Haraguchi2, Grace H Jean2, Ji-Yeun Lee2, Tho D Pham2,3, Katherine J L Jackson4, Krishna M Roskin5,6,7, Yi Liu8, Khoa Nguyen2, Robert S Ohgami9, Eleanor M Osborne10, Kari C Nadeau11,12, Claus U Niemann13,14, Julie Parsonnet15,16, Scott D Boyd1,11.
Abstract
Vaccination and infection promote the formation, tissue distribution, and clonal evolution of B cells, which encode humoral immune memory. We evaluated convergent antigen-specific antibody genes of similar sequences shared between individuals in pediatric and adult blood, and deceased organ donor tissues. B cell memory varied for different pathogens. Polysaccharide antigen-specific clones were not exclusive to the spleen. Adults had higher clone frequencies and greater class-switching in lymphoid tissues than blood, while pediatric blood had abundant class-switched convergent clones. Consistent with reported serology, pre-pandemic children had class-switched convergent clones to SARS-CoV-2 with weak cross-reactivity to other coronaviruses, while adult blood or tissues showed few such clones. The results highlight the prominence of early childhood B cell clonal expansions and cross-reactivity for future responses to novel pathogens.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33846272 DOI: 10.1126/science.abf6648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728