What is it about?
In an era of predicted recurring pandemics the ability to produce highly effective vaccines that provide long-lived protection from pathogens and their mutant variants will be critical. We know that highly successful vaccines induce memory B cells (MBCs) that provide life-long protection from re-infection by the original pathogen as well as from variants of that pathogen. However, human MBCs are a heterogeneous cell population, and it is not yet known which MBC subsets function to control homologous versus variant pathogen infections. In our manuscript we provide evidence that two different MBC subsets play distinct yet complementary roles in response to pathogen re-challenge. One subpopulation, IgG+ MBCs, differentiate into plasma cells ensuring the immediate production of antibodies to the original pathogen and closely related pathogens and the second subpopulation, IgM+ MBCs, produce new variant-specific MBCs through mutation and selection. In addition we provide evidence that the MBC’s expression of B cell receptors of the IgG versus IgM type dictates their ability to respond to the original pathogen versus variants of that pathogen.
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Why is it important?
We believe our discovery of distinct MBC subsets that dictate pathogen-driven fates upon challenge will have an impact on the design of vaccines that ensure protection against homologous and variant pathogen challenge, the gold standard of vaccine development.
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This page is a summary of: Isotype switching in human memory B cells sets intrinsic antigen-affinity thresholds that dictate antigen-driven fates, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, March 2024, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2313672121.
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