Tracking B cell responses to the SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccine

Felipe Lopes de Assis(National Institutes of Health), Kenneth B. Hoehn(Yale University), Xiaozhen Zhang(National Institutes of Health), Lela Kardava(National Institutes of Health), Connor D. Smith(National Institutes of Health), Omar El Merhebi(National Institutes of Health), Clarisa M. Buckner(National Institutes of Health), Krittin Trihemasava(National Institutes of Health), Wei Wang(National Institutes of Health), Catherine Seamon(National Institutes of Health), Vicky Chen(National Institutes of Health), Paul Schaughency(National Institutes of Health), Foo Cheung, Andrew J. Martins, Chi-I Chiang(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Yuxing Li(University of Maryland, Baltimore), John S. Tsang(National Institutes of Health), Tae‐Wook Chun(National Institutes of Health), Steven H. Kleinstein(Yale University), Susan Moir(National Institutes of Health)
Cell Reports
July 1, 2023
Cited by 26Open Access
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Abstract

Protective immunity following vaccination is sustained by long-lived antibody-secreting cells and resting memory B cells (MBCs). Responses to two-dose SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccination are evaluated longitudinally by multimodal single-cell analysis in three infection-naïve individuals. Integrated surface protein, transcriptomics, and B cell receptor (BCR) repertoire analysis of sorted plasmablasts and spike+ (S-2P+) and S-2P− B cells reveal clonal expansion and accumulating mutations among S-2P+ cells. These cells are enriched in a cluster of immunoglobulin G-expressing MBCs and evolve along a bifurcated trajectory rooted in CXCR3+ MBCs. One branch leads to CD11c+ atypical MBCs while the other develops from CD71+ activated precursors to resting MBCs, the dominant population at month 6. Among 12 evolving S-2P+ clones, several are populated with plasmablasts at early timepoints as well as CD71+ activated and resting MBCs at later timepoints, and display intra- and/or inter-cohort BCR convergence. These relationships suggest a coordinated and predictable evolution of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine-generated MBCs.


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