Efficient recall of Omicron-reactive B cell memory after a third dose of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine

Rishi R. Goel(University of Pennsylvania), Mark M. Painter(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Kendall A. Lundgreen(University of Pennsylvania), Sokratis A. Apostolidis(University of Pennsylvania), Amy E. Baxter(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Josephine R. Giles(Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy), Divij Mathew(University of Pennsylvania), Ajinkya Pattekar(University of Pennsylvania), Arnold Reynaldi(UNSW Sydney), David S. Khoury(UNSW Sydney), Sigrid Gouma(University of Pennsylvania), Philip Hicks(University of Pennsylvania), Sarah Dysinger(University of Pennsylvania), Amanda Hicks(University of Pennsylvania), Harsh Sharma(University of Pennsylvania), Sarah Herring(University of Pennsylvania), Scott W. Korte(University of Pennsylvania), Wumesh KC(University of Pennsylvania), Derek A. Oldridge(University of Pennsylvania), Rachel I. Erickson(University of Pennsylvania), Madison E. Weirick(University of Pennsylvania), Christopher M. McAllister(University of Pennsylvania), Moses Awofolaju(University of Pennsylvania), Nicole Tanenbaum(University of Pennsylvania), Jeanette Dougherty(University of Pennsylvania), Sherea Long(University of Pennsylvania), Kurt D’Andrea(University of Pennsylvania), Jacob T. Hamilton(University of Pennsylvania), M. A. McLaughlin(Translational Therapeutics (United States)), Justine C. Williams(University of Pennsylvania), Sharon Adamski(University of Pennsylvania), Oliva Kuthuru(University of Pennsylvania), Elizabeth M. Drapeau(University of Pennsylvania), Miles P. Davenport(UNSW Sydney), Scott E. Hensley(University of Pennsylvania), Paul Bates(University of Pennsylvania), Allison R. Greenplate(University of Pennsylvania), E. John Wherry(Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
February 22, 2022
Cited by 23Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Despite a clear role in protective immunity, the durability and quality of antibody and memory B cell responses induced by mRNA vaccination, particularly by a 3 rd dose of vaccine, remains unclear. Here, we examined antibody and memory B cell responses in a cohort of individuals sampled longitudinally for ∼9-10 months after the primary 2-dose mRNA vaccine series, as well as for ∼3 months after a 3 rd mRNA vaccine dose. Notably, antibody decay slowed significantly between 6- and 9-months post-primary vaccination, essentially stabilizing at the time of the 3 rd dose. Antibody quality also continued to improve for at least 9 months after primary 2-dose vaccination. Spike- and RBD-specific memory B cells were stable through 9 months post-vaccination with no evidence of decline over time, and ∼40-50% of RBD-specific memory B cells were capable of simultaneously recognizing the Alpha, Beta, Delta, and Omicron variants. Omicron-binding memory B cells induced by the first 2 doses of mRNA vaccine were boosted significantly by a 3rd dose and the magnitude of this boosting was similar to memory B cells specific for other variants. Pre-3 rd dose memory B cell frequencies correlated with the increase in neutralizing antibody titers after the 3 rd dose. In contrast, pre-3 rd dose antibody titers inversely correlated with the fold-change of antibody boosting, suggesting that high levels of circulating antibodies may limit reactivation of immunological memory and constrain further antibody boosting by mRNA vaccines. These data provide a deeper understanding of how the quantity and quality of antibody and memory B cell responses change over time and number of antigen exposures. These data also provide insight into potential immune dynamics following recall responses to additional vaccine doses or post-vaccination infections. Graphical Summary


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