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T-independent responses to polysaccharides in humans mobilize marginal zone B cells prediversified against gut bacterial antigens.

Sandra WellerDelphine SterlinTatiana FadeevEva CoignardAlba Verge de Los AiresClara GoetzRémi FritzenMathilde BahuaudFrederic BatteuxGuy GorochovJean-Claude WeillClaude-Agnès Reynaud
Published in: Science immunology (2023)
Marginal zone (MZ) B cells are one of the main actors of T-independent (TI) responses in mice. To identify the B cell subset(s) involved in such responses in humans, we vaccinated healthy individuals with Pneumovax, a model TI vaccine. By high-throughput repertoire sequencing of plasma cells (PCs) isolated 7 days after vaccination and of different B cell subpopulations before and after vaccination, we show that the PC response mobilizes large clones systematically, including an immunoglobulin M component, whose diversification and amplification predated the pneumococcal vaccination. These clones could be mainly traced back to MZ B cells, together with clonally related IgA + and, to a lesser extent, IgG + CD27 + B cells. Recombinant monoclonal antibodies isolated from large PC clones recognized a wide array of bacterial species from the gut flora, indicating that TI responses in humans largely mobilize MZ and switched B cells that most likely prediversified during mucosal immune responses against bacterial antigens and acquired pneumococcal cross-reactivity through somatic hypermutation.
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