Abstract
BackgroundCommunity-acquired pneumonia is a leading infectious cause of hospitalization. A few vaccines exist to prevent pneumococcal disease in adults, including a pneumococcal polysaccharide unconjugated vaccine and a protein conjugated polysaccharide vaccine. Previous studies on the human immune response to the unconjugated vaccine showed that the vaccine boosted the existing memory B cells. In the present study, we investigated the human B cell immune response following pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccination.MethodsPlasmablast B cells from a pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccinee were isolated and cloned for analysis. In response to primary vaccination, identical sequences from the plasmablast-derived antibodies were identified from multiple B cells, demonstrating evidence of clonal expansion. We evaluated the binding specificity of these human monoclonal antibodies in immunoassays, and tested there in vitro function in a multiplexed opsonophagocytic assay (MOPA). To characterize the plasmablast B cell response to the pneumococcal conjugated vaccine, the germline usage and the variable region somatic hypermutations on these antibodies were analyzed. Furthermore, a serotype 4 polysaccharide-specific antibody was tested in an animal challenge study to explore the in vivo functional activity.ResultsThe data suggests that the pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccine boosted memory B cell responses, likely derived from previous pneumococcal exposure. The majority of the plasmablast-derived antibodies contained higher numbers of variable region somatic hypermutations and evidence for selection, as demonstrated by replacement to silent ratio’s (R/S) greater than 2.9 in the complementarity-determining regions (CDRs). In addition, we found that VH3/JH4 was the predominant germline sequence used in these polysaccharide-specific B cells. All of the tested antibodies demonstrated narrow polysaccharide specificity in ELISA binding, and demonstrated functional opsonophagocytic killing (OPK) activity in the MOPA assay. The in-vivo animal challenge study showed that the tested serotype 4 polysaccharide-specific antibody demonstrated a potent protective effect when administered prior to bacterial challenge.ConclusionsThe findings on the pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugate vaccine responses from a vaccinated subject reported in this study are similar to previously published data on the pneumococcal polysaccharide unconjugated vaccine responses. In both vaccine regimens, the pre-existing human memory B cells were expanded after vaccination with preferential use of the germline VH3/JH4 genes.
Highlights
Community-acquired pneumonia is a leading infectious cause of hospitalization
The pre-existing human memory B cells were expanded after vaccination with preferential use of the germline VH3/JH4 genes
Human subject and Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) preparation Blood samples were obtained with informed consent from a donor who was vaccinated with Prevnar13®
Summary
Community-acquired pneumonia is a leading infectious cause of hospitalization. Previous studies on the human immune response to the unconjugated vaccine showed that the vaccine boosted the existing memory B cells. Streptococcus pneumoniae ( called pneumococcus) is a gram-positive bacterium that usually shows as a diplococcus or short chains of cells. It was first isolated by Pasteur and Sternberg in 1881 and is the most frequent cause of lower respiratory tract infection [1]. Community-acquired pneumonia is a leading infectious cause of hospitalization, the annual incidence of Pneumococcal pneumonia is 24.8 cases per 10,000 adults in USA reported from a large scale survey from 2010 to 2012 [2]. More than half of the people who died in the 1918 influenza epidemic (causing 50–100 million death toll) died of invasive pneumococcal disease [4]
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