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| Open AccessPD-L1- and IL-4-expressing basophils promote pathogenic accumulation of T follicular helper cells in lupus
Basophils have been implicated in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), as evidenced by the fact that basophil-deficient mice do not develop the disease. Here, the authors demonstrate that PD-L1 and IL-4 expression in basophils promotes the pathogenic accumulation of follicular helper T cells in patients with SLE and murine models.
- John TCHEN
- , Quentin SIMON
- & Nicolas CHARLES
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Article
| Open AccessAn ancestral SARS-CoV-2 vaccine induces anti-Omicron variants antibodies by hypermutation
Repeat vaccination with COVID-19 mRNA vaccines has been shown to increase breadth of the antibody response. Here the authors demonstrate that B cell clones induced by the ancestral COVID-19 vaccine develop into daughter clones with different reactivity to individual SARS-CoV-2 variants through the accumulation of somatic hypermutations.
- Seoryeong Park
- , Jaewon Choi
- & Junho Chung
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Article
| Open AccessImpact of PEG sensitization on the efficacy of PEG hydrogel-mediated tissue engineering
Concerns over the immunogenicity of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) are growing, and the implications for tissue engineering are unknown. Here the authors evaluate the impact of anti-PEG antibodies and PEG immunogenicity on the efficacy of a PEG hydrogel-based tissue engineering therapy.
- Alisa H. Isaac
- , Sarea Y. Recalde Phillips
- & Daniel L. Alge
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Article
| Open AccessEmerging variants develop total escape from potent monoclonal antibodies induced by BA.4/5 infection
Many emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants partially escape the humoral immune response. Here, Liu et al. characterize 28 antibodies from BA.4/5 breakthrough infections and find attrition of neutralization and complete loss of function for variants with Spike mutations at positions 455 and 456.
- Chang Liu
- , Raksha Das
- & Gavin R. Screaton
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Article
| Open AccessInfluenza antibody breadth and effector functions are immune correlates from acquisition of pandemic infection of children
In this study, the authors assessed influenza-specific antibody responses in a cohort of seasonally vaccinated children and report that seasonal vaccination is beneficial by enhancing pandemic influenza virus-specific antibodies and cross-reactive effector functions.
- Janice Z. Jia
- , Carolyn A. Cohen
- & Sophie A. Valkenburg
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Article
| Open AccessCoPoP liposomes displaying stabilized clade C HIV-1 Env elicit tier 2 multiclade neutralization in rabbits
HIV vaccine candidates often have limited capacity to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (nAbs). In this study, the authors show that stabilized Clade C HIV-1 Env protein trimers decorated on CoPoP liposomes induce nAbs against 18 of 20 multiclade tier 2 HIV-1 strains in immunized rabbits.
- Annemart Koornneef
- , Kanika Vanshylla
- & Frank Wegmann
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Article
| Open AccessImmunoglobulin G N-glycan markers of accelerated biological aging during chronic HIV infection
In this study, Giron et al. find that people living with chronic HIV experience accelerated aging-associated alterations in antibody glycans. These alterations, attributed to senescence enzymes, predict comorbidities and reduce the antiviral function of antibodies.
- Leila B. Giron
- , Qin Liu
- & Mohamed Abdel-Mohsen
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Article
| Open AccessVaccination impairs de novo immune response to omicron breakthrough infection, a precondition for the original antigenic sin
Immune imprinting can affect the response to future infection with pathogen variants. Here, Pušnik et. al. demonstrate that previous vaccination with wild-type SARS-CoV-2 vaccine hampers the formation of an immune response to mutated regions of omicron surface proteins following omicron breakthrough infection.
- Jernej Pušnik
- , Jasmin Zorn
- & Hendrik Streeck
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Article
| Open AccessSARS-CoV-2-specific cellular and humoral immunity after bivalent BA.4/5 COVID-19-vaccination in previously infected and non-infected individuals
Prior infection or exposure to SARS-CoV-2 may influence immunogenicity and effectiveness of subsequent vaccination to new strains of virus. Here the authors show that immunogenicity of a BA.4/5 mRNA vaccine differed in recipients depending on whether they had been exposed to or infected with an earlier strain of virus.
- Rebecca Urschel
- , Saskia Bronder
- & Martina Sester
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Article
| Open AccessMonoclonal antibodies targeting sites in respiratory syncytial virus attachment G protein provide protection against RSV-A and RSV-B in mice
Effective antibodies targeting various respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) proteins are needed to address public health burden of RSV. Here the authors shows that in addition to the currently approved F-targeting monoclonal antibodies, anti-G cross-reactive monoclonal antibodies to RSV-A and RSV-B strains can provide cross-protection and prevent from RSV disease.
- Youri Lee
- , Laura Klenow
- & Surender Khurana
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Article
| Open AccessExpression of USP25 associates with fibrosis, inflammation and metabolism changes in IgG4-related disease
IgG4-related disease is a fibro-inflammatory disorder, characterized by infiltration of IgG4 producing plasma cells in the target organs. Here authors show that the affected B cells express less ubiquitin-specific protease 25 (USP25), and this results in activation of multiple pathways involved in cytoskeleton reorganization, inflammation and energy metabolism, which might govern disease pathogenesis.
- Panpan Jiang
- , Yukai Jing
- & Chaohong Liu
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Article
| Open AccessDefective mitochondria remodelling in B cells leads to an aged immune response
B cell activation in the germinal centre (GC) is accompanied by metabolic adaptation, but the functions of mitochondria remodelling during this process is unclear. Here the authors find that B cell-specific deficiency of Tfam, a transcription factor modulating mitochondria remodelling, impacts GC responses and induces aged immune features in B cells.
- Marta Iborra-Pernichi
- , Jonathan Ruiz García
- & Nuria Martínez-Martín
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Article
| Open AccessClearance of persistent SARS-CoV-2 associates with increased neutralizing antibodies in advanced HIV disease post-ART initiation
There is limited data on immune factors contributing to SARS-CoV-2 viral clearance in people living with HIV. Here, the authors show that re-emergence of the neutralizing antibody response may be key to clearing persistent SARS-CoV-2 infection in ART-mediated recovery from immunosuppression in advanced HIV disease.
- Farina Karim
- , Catherine Riou
- & Alex Sigal
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Article
| Open AccessDistinct evolution of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron XBB and BA.2.86/JN.1 lineages combining increased fitness and antibody evasion
SARS-CoV-2 evolved into several sublineages harboring different mutations in spike. Here, the authors isolate and characterize nine SARS-CoV-2 variants and show that EG.5.1.3 has highest fitness in nasal epithelial cells, while JN.1 shows lower affinity to ACE2 and higher immune evasion compared to BA.2.86.1.
- Delphine Planas
- , Isabelle Staropoli
- & Olivier Schwartz
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Article
| Open AccessHuman IgG Fc-engineering for enhanced plasma half-life, mucosal distribution and killing of cancer cells and bacteria
Antibody based biologics are a rapidly growing class of therapeutics with interest to enhance their performance, distribution, longevity and effectivity. Here, authors report the engineering of human IgG Fc to enhance plasma half-life, mucosal distribution and killing of cancer cells and bacteria.
- Stian Foss
- , Siri A. Sakya
- & Jan Terje Andersen
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Article
| Open AccessAltered receptor binding, antibody evasion and retention of T cell recognition by the SARS-CoV-2 XBB.1.5 spike protein
New variants of SARS-CoV-2 virus can evolve such that antibodies that recognised previous versions are not able to recognise newer versions. Here the authors characterise antibody binding to the XBB.1.5 variant and how antibodies and T cells from persons infected with earlier versions of SARS-CoV-2 are able to recognise and/or bind to the XBB.1.5 spike protein.
- Dhiraj Mannar
- , James W. Saville
- & Sriram Subramaniam
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Article
| Open AccessPrior flavivirus immunity skews the yellow fever vaccine response to cross-reactive antibodies with potential to enhance dengue virus infection
Flavivirus infection or vaccination can induce cross-reactive immune responses. Here, the authors show how previous immunization with the tick-borne encephalitis virus vaccine affects the immune response to the yellow fever vaccine, suggesting that the yellow fever vaccine virus conceals epitopes shared with other flaviviruses in flavivirus-naive but not flavivirus-pre-exposed individuals.
- Antonio Santos-Peral
- , Fabian Luppa
- & Simon Rothenfusser
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| Open AccessDemographic and Clinical Factors Associated With SARS-CoV-2 Spike 1 Antibody Response Among Vaccinated US Adults: the C4R Study
The antibody response to COVID-19 vaccines varies among individuals. Here the authors find that older age, male sex, smoking, higher BMI, vaccine type, and certain comorbidities are associated with lower anti-S1 antibody levels after COVID-19 vaccinations, indicating that certain groups might benefit from higher frequency or doses of vaccination.
- John S. Kim
- , Yifei Sun
- & Elizabeth C. Oelsner
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Article
| Open AccessA monoclonal antibody targeting a large surface of the receptor binding motif shows pan-neutralizing SARS-CoV-2 activity
Characterisation of monoclonal antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 are useful for potential therapeutics or to understand more about the immune response to this virus. Here the authors characterise a monoclonal antibody that has a broad range of reactivity against SARS-CoV-2 variants and measure how it binds to its specific target region of the receptor binding domain.
- Leire de Campos-Mata
- , Benjamin Trinité
- & Giuliana Magri
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Article
| Open AccessEnhancing antibody responses by multivalent antigen display on thymus-independent DNA origami scaffolds
Three-dimensional DNA origami constructs can be used to deliver vaccine antigens in a multi-valent form. Here the authors design a DNA origami system for SARS-CoV-2 proteins and characterize in mice the immune response and protective capacity of generated antibodies, finding that the construct itself is not immunogenic.
- Eike-Christian Wamhoff
- , Larance Ronsard
- & Mark Bathe
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Article
| Open AccessHumoral profiles of toddlers and young children following SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination
Nziza et al. profile anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody responses in infants and toddlers after mRNA vaccination and demonstrate a strong functional activation of humoral immunity in this age group when compared with adults and naturally infected children.
- Nadège Nziza
- , Yixiang Deng
- & Lael M. Yonker
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Article
| Open AccessCaMK4 controls follicular helper T cell expansion and function during normal and autoimmune T-dependent B cell responses
Calmodulin-dependent kinase 4 (CaMK4) has been implicated in humoral immunity. Here, the authors demonstrate that CaMK4 expression controls the differentiation of T follicular helper cells, leading to the expansion of pathogenic B cells in systemic lupus erythematosus.
- Marc Scherlinger
- , Hao Li
- & George C. Tsokos
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Article
| Open AccessIdentification of a highly conserved neutralizing epitope within the RBD region of diverse SARS-CoV-2 variants
Most recent SARS-CoV-2 variants showed exceptional immune evasion properties. Here, the authors identify a highly conserved epitope within the RBD targeted by a broad spectrum neutralizing antibody BA7535 that shows therapeutic antiviral potency in mouse studies.
- Yanqun Wang
- , An Yan
- & Jincun Zhao
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Article
| Open Accessi-shaped antibody engineering enables conformational tuning of biotherapeutic receptor agonists
In contrast to their clinical success as inhibitors and targeting agents, antibodies have generally been ineffective as receptor agonists. Here, Romei et al. leverage a natural homotypic interface to tune antibody geometry, enabling optimization of agonist activity for multiple therapeutic targets.
- Matthew G. Romei
- , Brandon Leonard
- & Greg A. Lazar
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Article
| Open AccessHLA class I peptide polymorphisms contribute to class II DQβ0603:DQα0103 antibody specificity
Bead-based assays to assess the donor-specific antibody profile of solid organ transplant patients often produce discordant results relative to cell-based alternatives. In this study, the authors demonstrate that, for some MHC class-II-specific antibodies, discordance can be attributed to recognition of the MHC class-I-derived peptides bound to MHC class-II molecules.
- N. Remi Shih
- , Thoa Nong
- & Jar-How Lee
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Article
| Open AccessProtection against symptomatic dengue infection by neutralizing antibodies varies by infection history and infecting serotype
There is still a need to improve understanding of dengue-specific immunity. Here, by analyzing the antibody response in a pediatric cohort the authors show that the protective capacity of neutralizing antibodies depends on infection history and serotype, but its estimation varies by assay condition and virion maturation.
- Sandra Bos
- , Aaron L. Graber
- & Eva Harris
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Article
| Open AccessN-linked Fc glycosylation is not required for IgG-B-cell receptor function in a GC-derived B-cell line
IgG molecules are glycosylated at a conserved asparagine residue of their constant region, and this modification is essential for the effector functions of their soluble form, such as complement activation and binding to Fcɣ receptors. Here authors show that in a model B-cell line, neither the expression nor the function of the membrane-bound form of IgG depend on glycosylation.
- Theresa Kissel
- , Veerle F. A. M. Derksen
- & René E. M. Toes
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Article
| Open AccessIgM N-glycosylation correlates with COVID-19 severity and rate of complement deposition
The role of IgG glycosylation in the immune response has been studied, but less is known about IgM glycosylation. Here the authors characterize glycosylation of SARS-CoV-2 spike specific IgM and show that it correlates with COVID-19 severity and affects complement deposition.
- Benjamin S. Haslund-Gourley
- , Kyra Woloszczuk
- & Mary Ann Comunale
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Article
| Open AccessSecreted IgM modulates IL-10 expression in B cells
Il-10-expressing B cells play a pivotal role in immune homeostasis, but little is known about the factors and pathways that affect the development of this heterologous population of regulatory B cells. Here authors show in a mouse model that in embryonic life, soluble IgM restrains the expansion of Il-10-positive B cells, via utilizing FcµR and other putative receptors.
- Shannon Eileen McGettigan
- , Lazaro Emilio Aira
- & Gudrun F. Debes
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Article
| Open AccessHigh monoclonal neutralization titers reduced breakthrough HIV-1 viral loads in the Antibody Mediated Prevention trials
Antibody Mediated Prevention (AMP) trials showed that the broadly neutralizing antibody VRC01 could prevent some HIV-1 acquisitions. Here the authors use VRC01 levels and the sensitivity of each acquired HIV virus to predict viral loads in the AMP studies and show that VRC01 influenced viral loads, though potency was lower in vivo than expected.
- Daniel B. Reeves
- , Bryan T. Mayer
- & Srilatha Edupuganti
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Article
| Open AccessEarly mucosal events promote distinct mucosal and systemic antibody responses to live attenuated influenza vaccine
Nasally delivered live attenuated influenza vaccines (LAIV) have been shown to be effective in vaccine trials yet immune responses are mostly measured in blood. Here the authors report a clinical trial in young adults and measure immune responses in the mucosa and blood to identify compartmentalised responses.
- Ryan S. Thwaites
- , Ashley S. S. Uruchurtu
- & Peter J. M. Openshaw
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Article
| Open AccessA lung-selective delivery of mRNA encoding broadly neutralizing antibody against SARS-CoV-2 infection
The authors use lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) that predominantly accumulate in the lung to deliver mRNA encoding for the broadly neutralizing antibody 8-9D, and achieve superior inhibition of SARS-CoV-2 infection in mice compared to control LNPs.
- Wanbo Tai
- , Kai Yang
- & Gong Cheng
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| Open AccessNeutralization of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BQ.1, BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 variants following SARS-CoV-2 infection or vaccination in children
In this work, authors investigate the virus-neutralizing capacity in children against circulating BQ.1, BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 SARS-CoV-2 variants. Vaccination induced more neutralizing antibodies against BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 in youngest children ( < 5 years) compared with >5 years children.
- Lorenza Bellusci
- , Gabrielle Grubbs
- & Surender Khurana
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Article
| Open AccessAdults on pre-exposure prophylaxis (tenofovir-emtricitabine) have faster clearance of anti-HIV monoclonal antibody VRC01
Small molecule drugs can affect clearance of monoclonal antibodies, but this hasn’t been assessed for oral HIV-1 pre-exposure prophylaxis. Here, the authors find that faster serum clearance of an experimental IgG1 monoclonal antibody, VRC01, is associated with use of tenofovir-emtricitabine, possibly explained by increased epithelial intestinal permeability.
- Yunda Huang
- , Lily Zhang
- & Maria P. Lemos
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Article
| Open AccessSequential vaccinations with divergent H1N1 influenza virus strains induce multi-H1 clade neutralizing antibodies in swine
Seasonal influenza vaccines typically fail to induce cross-protective antibody responses. Here, Van Reeth et al. sequentially vaccinate pigs with diverse H1N1 viruses and show that this strategy induces antibodies against a panel of H1N1 strains from swine and humans and protects against antigenically mismatched strains.
- Kristien Van Reeth
- , Anna Parys
- & Elien Vandoorn
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Article
| Open AccessThe extrafollicular B cell response is a hallmark of childhood idiopathic nephrotic syndrome
Although B cell-targeting therapies can provide clinical benefits to children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (INS), B lymphocyte subsets have not been extensively studied in this disease. Here, using single-cell RNA sequencing, the authors identify an extrafollicular B cell signature in children with INS.
- Tho-Alfakar Al-Aubodah
- , Lamine Aoudjit
- & Tomoko Takano
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Article
| Open AccessStepwise differentiation of follicular helper T cells reveals distinct developmental and functional states
Follicular helper T cells play critical roles in the formation of high affinity antibody responses, but the signals involved in the development of these cells after initial differentiation are poorly understood. Here Podestà, Cavazzoni and colleagues characterise transitionary phases of follicular helper T cell development and how progression through these stages is linked to humoral immunity.
- Manuel A. Podestà
- , Cecilia B. Cavazzoni
- & Peter T. Sage
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Article
| Open AccessThe structure of the teleost Immunoglobulin M core provides insights on polymeric antibody evolution, assembly, and function
The formation of polymeric Ig complexes is important for the function of IgM and can vary between species. Here the authors structurally analyse IgM from a teleost species that doesn’t encode a joining chain, which results in a different 3D structure compared to mammalian IgM where other parts of the protein associate to form polymeric complexes.
- Mengfan Lyu
- , Andrey G. Malyutin
- & Beth M. Stadtmueller
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Article
| Open AccessInadequate structural constraint on Fab approach rather than paratope elicitation limits HIV-1 MPER vaccine utility
It is still unclear why HIV-1 vaccines targeting MPER induce antibodies that fail to bind HIV. Here, the authors show that antibodies targeting membrane-proximal linear epitopes of virion spike proteins must generate relevant antibody paratopes and approach angles to ligate their quarry in a topologically restricted site.
- Kemin Tan
- , Junjian Chen
- & Mikyung Kim
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Article
| Open AccessA combined adjuvant approach primes robust germinal center responses and humoral immunity in non-human primates
Protein antigens, such as HIV envelope protein, require adjuvants for high immunogenicity. Here the authors show that a combined adjuvant approach with slow antigen delivery and potent ISCOMs adjuvant primes robust germinal center activity and humoral immunity in non-human primates. pSer-modified antigen shifts immunodominance to allow subdominant epitope-targeting of rare B cells.
- Ivy Phung
- , Kristen A. Rodrigues
- & Shane Crotty
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Article
| Open AccessHIV-1 treatment timing shapes the human intestinal memory B-cell repertoire to commensal bacteria
HIV-1 infection is known to impact the gut mucosa, effecting the microbiota and immune system, but early antiretroviral therapy is linked to partial reversal of this phenomena. Here the authors explore the impact of early commencement of antiretroviral therapy and show this can limit the abnormal responses of intestinal B cells associated with HIV-1 infection.
- Cyril Planchais
- , Luis M. Molinos-Albert
- & Hugo Mouquet
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Article
| Open AccessPrevious infection with seasonal coronaviruses does not protect male Syrian hamsters from challenge with SARS-CoV-2
Here, the authors analysed immune response to two consecutive coronavirus infections and observed that hamsters infected with seasonal coronaviruses were not protected from COVID-19 despite cross-reactive antibodies. Antiviral and germinal center B cell responses were suppressed but not during SARS-CoV-2 variant infections.
- Magen E. Francis
- , Ethan B. Jansen
- & Alyson A. Kelvin
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Article
| Open AccessGerminal center output is sustained by HELLS-dependent DNA-methylation-maintenance in B cells
Loss-of-function mutations in the chromatin remodelling protein HELLS result in humoral immune deficiency. Authors here show in a conditional knockout mouse model that HELLS controls the kinetics of a typical germinal center response by DNA methylation, its absence leading to either the appearance of memory-B cell markers or a metabolic state change typical of plasma cells.
- Clara Cousu
- , Eléonore Mulot
- & Sébastien Storck
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Article
| Open AccessEngaging an HIV vaccine target through the acquisition of low B cell affinity
Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) for HIV have been difficult to elicit with one issue being the low B cell affinity required. Here the authors use a transgenic mouse bearing human-like antibody repertoires to show that low affinity B cells persist which enables vaccine expansion of antibodies against the CD4 binding site, a conserved HIV bnAb target.
- Larance Ronsard
- , Ashraf S. Yousif
- & Daniel Lingwood
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Article
| Open AccessSARS-CoV-2 vaccination elicits broad and potent antibody effector functions to variants of concern in vulnerable populations
As the SARS-SoV-2 pandemic progressed and the vaccinated population increased, a number of variants of concerns that circumvented the vaccine induced immunity emerged. Here the authors compare SARS-SoV-2 mRNA vaccine responses in pregnant women and other people, characterising the antibody response and Fc functions, and potency against a range of variants of concern.
- Andrew P. Hederman
- , Harini Natarajan
- & Margaret E. Ackerman
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Article
| Open AccessAntibody-mediated NK cell activation as a correlate of immunity against influenza infection
Antibodies play a crucial role in protection from influenza virus infection, but functional details, particularly in older adults, are incomplete. Here the authors show that NK cell-activating antibodies are associated with protection from influenza infection in vaccinated older adults.
- Carolyn M. Boudreau
- , John S. Burke IV
- & Galit Alter
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Article
| Open AccessElevated binding and functional antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 in infants versus mothers
Data on antibody response to SARS-CoV-2 in infants directly compared with their mothers is limited. Stoddard et al. find distinct antibody profiles in infants, including elevated levels of antibody binding to Spike, elevated ADCC, and convergent antibody binding escape profiles in the Spike fusion peptide.
- Caitlin I. Stoddard
- , Kevin Sung
- & Julie Overbaugh
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Article
| Open AccessCorrelates of protection for booster doses of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine BNT162b2
Vaccination with multiple doses has been proven effective against severe COVID-19, but protection levels widely vary among individuals. This study examines the serological and immunological profiles in recipients of multiple doses of Pfizer BNT162b2 vaccine for immune markers that correlate with protection against and susceptibility for SARS-CoV-2 infection.
- Tomer Hertz
- , Shlomia Levy
- & Orly Weinstein
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Article
| Open AccessMonoclonal antibody levels and protection from COVID-19
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have shown efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 infection in clinical trials. Here the authors model the dose-response relationship between the dose of mAbs and protection from symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection. Further, the protection is comparable to that achieved by vaccination.
- Eva Stadler
- , Martin T. Burgess
- & David S. Khoury