Circulating and intrahepatic antiviral B cells are defective in hepatitis B

Alice R. Burton(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Laura J. Pallett(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Laura E. McCoy(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Kornelija Suveizdytė(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Oliver E. Amin(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Leo Swadling(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Elena Alberts(Institute of Infection and Immunity), Brian R Davidson(University College London), Patrick Kennedy(Queen Mary University of London), Upkar S. Gill(Queen Mary University of London), Claudia Mauri(University College London), Paul A. Blair(University College London), Nadège Pelletier(Roche (Switzerland)), Mala K. Maini(Institute of Infection and Immunity)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
August 9, 2018
Cited by 325Open Access
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Abstract

B cells are increasingly recognized as playing an important role in the ongoing control of hepatitis B virus (HBV). The development of antibodies against the viral surface antigen (HBV surface antigen [HBsAgs]) constitutes the hallmark of resolution of acute infection and is a therapeutic goal for functional cure of chronic HBV (CHB). We characterized B cells directly ex vivo from the blood and liver of patients with CHB to investigate constraints on their antiviral potential. Unexpectedly, we found that HBsAg-specific B cells persisted in the blood and liver of many patients with CHB and were enriched for T-bet, a signature of antiviral potential in B cells. However, purified, differentiated HBsAg-specific B cells from patients with CHB had defective antibody production, consistent with undetectable anti-HBs antibodies in vivo. HBsAg-specific and global B cells had an accumulation of CD21-CD27- atypical memory B cells (atMBC) with high expression of inhibitory receptors, including PD-1. These atMBC demonstrated altered signaling, homing, differentiation into antibody-producing cells, survival, and antiviral/proinflammatory cytokine production that could be partially rescued by PD-1 blockade. Analysis of B cells within healthy and HBV-infected livers implicated the combination of this tolerogenic niche and HBV infection in driving PD-1hiatMBC and impairing B cell immunity.


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