Abstract
Protective immunity against COVID-19 likely depends on the production of SARS-CoV-2–specific plasma cells and memory B cells postinfection or postvaccination. Previous work has found that germinal center reactions are disrupted in severe COVID-19. This may adversely affect long-term immunity against reinfection. Consistent with an extrafollicular B cell response, patients with severe COVID-19 have elevated frequencies of clonally expanded, class-switched, unmutated plasmablasts. However, it is unclear whether B cell populations in individuals with mild COVID-19 are similarly skewed. In this study, we use single-cell RNA sequencing of B cells to show that in contrast to patients with severe COVID-19, subjects with mildly symptomatic COVID-19 have B cell repertoires enriched for clonally diverse, somatically hypermutated memory B cells ∼30 d after the onset of symptoms. This provides evidence that B cell responses are less disrupted in mild COVID-19 and result in the production of memory B cells.
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CITATION STYLE
Hoehn, K. B., Ramanathan, P., Unterman, A., Sumida, T. S., Asashima, H., Hafler, D. A., … Kleinstein, S. H. (2021). Cutting Edge: Distinct B Cell Repertoires Characterize Patients with Mild and Severe COVID-19. The Journal of Immunology, 206(12), 2785–2790. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.2100135
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