Omicron BA.1 breakthrough infection drives long-term remodeling of the memory B cell repertoire in vaccinated individuals
Summary
How infection by a viral variant showing antigenic drift impacts a preformed mature human memory B cell (MBC) repertoire remains an open question. Here, we studied the MBC response up to 6 months after Omicron BA.1 breakthrough infection in individuals previously vaccinated with three doses of mRNA vaccine. Longitudinal analysis, using single-cell multi-omics and functional analysis of monoclonal antibodies from RBD-specific MBCs, revealed that a BA.1 breakthrough infection mostly recruited pre-existing cross-reactive MBCs with limited de novo response against BA.1-restricted epitopes. Reorganization of clonal hierarchy and new rounds of germinal center reaction, however, combined to maintain diversity and induce progressive maturation of the MBC repertoire against common Hu-1 and BA.1, but not BA.5-restricted, SARS-CoV-2 Spike RBD epitopes. Such remodeling was further associated with marked improvement in overall neutralizing breadth and potency. These findings have fundamental implications for the design of future vaccination booster strategies.
Competing Interest Statement
Outside of the submitted work, M. Mahevas. received research funds from GSK and personal fees from LFB and Amgen, J.-C.W. received consulting fees from Institut Merieux, P.B. received consulting fees from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals.
Footnotes
↵† shared senior authorship
Subject Area
- Biochemistry (12738)
- Bioengineering (9610)
- Bioinformatics (31123)
- Biophysics (16034)
- Cancer Biology (13110)
- Cell Biology (18746)
- Clinical Trials (138)
- Developmental Biology (10138)
- Ecology (15127)
- Epidemiology (2067)
- Evolutionary Biology (19334)
- Genetics (12838)
- Genomics (17711)
- Immunology (12839)
- Microbiology (30051)
- Molecular Biology (12535)
- Neuroscience (65471)
- Paleontology (484)
- Pathology (2028)
- Pharmacology and Toxicology (3500)
- Physiology (5423)
- Plant Biology (11236)
- Synthetic Biology (3104)
- Systems Biology (7744)
- Zoology (1748)