Mechanisms through which live viral vaccines generate superior long-lived humoral immunity (#22)
The antibody response to natural infection, with a
number of viruses, is life-long. Furthermore, neutralising antibody is by far the
best correlate of long-term protective immunity conferred by effective vaccines. Indeed, humoral immunity to smallpox elicited by
the live vaccinia virus vaccine is stable, lasts for decades, and is considered a valuable benchmark for the functional
attributes of a good vaccine. We hypothesized that it is the escalating concentration of replicating virus (antigens)
which provide important cues to key immune cell subsets, including CD4 T follicular
helper (TFH) cells and B cells in the germinal centre (GC) responses,
and these are critical for induction and maintenance of robust, long-lived antibody
responses. We used replication-competent or
replication-poor poxviruses along with live or inactivated influenza A virus
strains to infect mice. We
found that replication-competent viruses, compared with poorly replicating or
inactivated viruses, induced more robust TFH and GC responses. These
responses to replication-competent viruses persisted longer and correlated with
significantly higher virus-neutralizing antibody titres. We next transferred antigen-specific
B cell receptor (BCR) transgenic B cells into recipient animals and infected
them with recombinant poxviruses that express a foreign antigen (recognised by
the BCR) to study antigen-specific responses to infection. We found that,
compared with poorly replicating viruses, replicating viruses induced increased
frequency of somatic hypermutations in the variable region exon of the immunoglobulin heavy
chain of transgenic B cells and this was associated with affinity maturation.
Our data indicates that replicative capacity of virus directs the induction of
durable, long-lived neutralizing
antibody responses through generation of robust TFH and GC
responses.