Viral Replicative Capacity, Antigen Availability via Hematogenous Spread, and High T FH :T FR Ratios Drive Induction of Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses

  • Eldi P
  • Chaudhri G
  • Nutt S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Neutralizing antibody response is the best-known correlate of long-term protective immunity for most of the currently licensed clinically effective viral vaccines. However, the host immune and viral factors that are critical for the induction of robust and durable antiviral humoral immune responses are not well understood. Our study provides insight into the dynamics of key cellular mediators of germinal center reaction during live virus infections and the influence of viral replicative capacity on the magnitude of antiviral antibody response and effector function. The significance of our study lies in two key findings. First, the systemic spread of even poorly replicating or nonreplicating viruses to mimic the spread of antigens from replicating viruses due to escalating antigen concentration is fundamental to the induction of durable antibody responses. Second, the T FH :T FR ratio may be used as an early predictor of protective antiviral humoral immune responses long before memory responses are generated. Live viral vaccines elicit protective, long-lived humoral immunity, but the underlying mechanisms through which this occurs are not fully elucidated. Generation of affinity matured, long-lived protective antibody responses involve close interactions between T follicular helper (T FH ) cells, germinal center (GC) B cells, and T follicular regulatory (T FR ) cells. We postulated that escalating concentrations of antigens from replicating viruses or live vaccines, spread through the hematogenous route, are essential for the induction and maintenance of long-lived protective antibody responses. Using replicating and poorly replicating or nonreplicating orthopox and influenza A viruses, we show that the magnitude of TFH cell, GC B cell, and neutralizing antibody responses is directly related to virus replicative capacity. Further, we have identified that both lymphoid and circulating T FH :T FR cell ratios during the peak GC response can be used as an early predictor of protective, long-lived antibody response induction. Finally, administration of poorly or nonreplicating viruses to allow hematogenous spread generates significantly stronger T FH :T FR ratios and robust T FH , GC B cell and neutralizing antibody responses. IMPORTANCE Neutralizing antibody response is the best-known correlate of long-term protective immunity for most of the currently licensed clinically effective viral vaccines. However, the host immune and viral factors that are critical for the induction of robust and durable antiviral humoral immune responses are not well understood. Our study provides insight into the dynamics of key cellular mediators of germinal center reaction during live virus infections and the influence of viral replicative capacity on the magnitude of antiviral antibody response and effector function. The significance of our study lies in two key findings. First, the systemic spread of even poorly replicating or nonreplicating viruses to mimic the spread of antigens from replicating viruses due to escalating antigen concentration is fundamental to the induction of durable antibody responses. Second, the T FH :T FR ratio may be used as an early predictor of protective antiviral humoral immune responses long before memory responses are generated.

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APA

Eldi, P., Chaudhri, G., Nutt, S. L., Newsome, T. P., & Karupiah, G. (2019). Viral Replicative Capacity, Antigen Availability via Hematogenous Spread, and High T FH :T FR Ratios Drive Induction of Potent Neutralizing Antibody Responses. Journal of Virology, 93(6). https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.01795-18

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