Repeated COVID-19 vaccine boosters elicit variant-specific memory B cells in humans
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The first exposure to a pathogen or an antigen profoundly impacts immune responses upon subsequent encounter with related pathogens. This immune imprinting explains that infection or vaccination with currently circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants primarily recalls cross-reactive memory B cells and antibodies induced by prior Wu spike (S) glycoprotein exposure rather than priming de novo responses. The magnitude and persistence of immune imprinting in mRNA vaccinated populations and the prospect to overcome it are not understood. To understand the impact of immune imprinting, we investigated memory B cell and plasma antibody responses after administration of multiple doses of XBB.1.5 and JN.1/KP.2 updated COVID-19 vaccine boosters. We found that administration of the JN.1/KP.2 booster elicited broadly neutralizing antibody responses against recently circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants that were accounted for by recall of Wu S-induced immunity. We detected an increased fraction of serum antibodies and particularly memory B cells recognizing XBB.1.5 S and KP.2 S, but not Wu S, relative to individuals who received a single XBB.1.5 booster a year prior. These findings suggest that repeated exposures to antigenically divergent S trimers contribute to progressively overcoming immune imprinting and support vaccine updates and innovation to provide continued protection against COVID-19.
In brief
Immune imprinting due to repeated SARS-CoV-2 Wuhan-Hu-1 spike exposures is widely observed in humans. Tortorici et al. show that the humoral immune response is dominated by recall of pre-existing Wu S-induced serum antibodies and memory B cells after administration of multiple XBB.1.5 and JN.1/KP.2 COVID-19 vaccine boosters. However, the detection of an appreciable fraction of serum antibodies and particularly memory B cells binding the updated vaccine antigens, but not Wu, suggests a path towards overcoming immune imprinting
Highlights
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XBB.1.5, JN.1 and KP.2 S COVID-19 vaccine boosters elicit neutralizing antibodies against current variants.
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Serum neutralizing activity against circulating variants elicited after multiple doses of updated COVID-19 vaccine boosters derive from recall of Wu S-elicited antibodies.
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Non-neutralizing antibodies specific for the updated spike antigens were detected after multiple, updated COVID-19 boosters.