A sex-biased imbalance between Tfr, Tph, and atypical B cells determines antibody responses in COVID-19 patients

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Abstract

Sex-biased humoral immune responses to COVID-19 patients have been observed, but the cellular basis for this is not understood. Using single-cell proteomics by mass cytometry, we find disrupted regulation of humoral immunity in COVID-19 patients, with a sex-biased loss of circulating follicular regulatory T cells (cTfr) at a significantly greater rate in male patients. In addition, a male sex-associated cellular network of T-peripheral helper, plasma blasts, proliferating and extrafollicular/atypical CD11c+ memory B cells was strongly positively correlated with neutralizing antibody concentrations and negatively correlated with cTfr frequency. These results suggest that sex-specific differences to the balance of cTfr and a network of extrafollicular antibody production-associated cell types may be a key factor in the altered humoral immune responses between male and female COVID-19 patients.

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Søndergaard, J. N., Tulyeu, J., Edahiro, R., Shirai, Y., Yamaguchi, Y., Murakami, T., … Wing, J. B. (2023). A sex-biased imbalance between Tfr, Tph, and atypical B cells determines antibody responses in COVID-19 patients. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(4). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2217902120

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