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  • Profiling the specificity of clonally expanded plasma cells during chronic viral infection by single-cell analysis.

Profiling the specificity of clonally expanded plasma cells during chronic viral infection by single-cell analysis.

European journal of immunology (2021-11-03)
Daniel Neumeier, Alessandro Pedrioli, Alessandro Genovese, Ioana Sandu, Roy Ehling, Kai-Lin Hong, Chrysa Papadopoulou, Andreas Agrafiotis, Raphael Kuhn, Danielle Shlesinger, Damiano Robbiani, Jiami Han, Laura Hauri, Lucia Csepregi, Victor Greiff, Doron Merkler, Sai T Reddy, Annette Oxenius, Alexander Yermanos
ABSTRACT

Plasma cells and their secreted antibodies play a central role in the long-term protection against chronic viral infection. However, due to experimental limitations, a comprehensive description of linked genotypic, phenotypic, and antibody repertoire features of plasma cells (gene expression, clonal frequency, virus specificity, and affinity) has been challenging to obtain. To address this, we performed single-cell transcriptome and antibody repertoire sequencing of the murine BM plasma cell population following chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. Our single-cell sequencing approach recovered full-length and paired heavy- and light-chain sequence information for thousands of plasma cells and enabled us to perform recombinant antibody expression and specificity screening. Antibody repertoire analysis revealed that, relative to protein immunization, chronic infection led to increased levels of clonal expansion, class-switching, and somatic variants. Furthermore, antibodies from the highly expanded and class-switched (IgG) plasma cells were found to be specific for multiple viral antigens and a subset of clones exhibited cross-reactivity to nonviral and autoantigens. Integrating single-cell transcriptome data with antibody specificity suggested that plasma cell transcriptional phenotype was correlated to viral antigen specificity. Our findings demonstrate that chronic viral infection can induce and sustain plasma cell clonal expansion, combined with significant somatic hypermutation, and can generate cross-reactive antibodies.

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