Vaccine-elicited CD4 T cells prevent the deletion of antiviral B cells in chronic infection

Author:

Narr KerstinORCID,Ertuna Yusuf I.,Fallet BenedictORCID,Cornille Karen,Dimitrova Mirela,Marx Anna-Friederike,Martin Katrin,Abreu Mota Tiago,Künzli MarcoORCID,Schreiner DavidORCID,Brunner Tobias M.ORCID,Kreutzfeldt MarioORCID,Wagner Ingrid,Geier Florian,Bestmann LukasORCID,Löhning MaxORCID,Merkler Doron,King Carolyn G.,Pinschewer Daniel D.ORCID

Abstract

Chronic viral infections subvert protective B cell immunity. An early type I interferon (IFN-I)–driven bias to short-lived plasmablast differentiation leads to clonal deletion, so-called “decimation,” of antiviral memory B cells. Therefore, prophylactic countermeasures against decimation remain an unmet need. We show that vaccination-induced CD4 T cells prevented the decimation of naïve and memory B cells in chronically lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV)-infected mice. Although these B cell responses were largely T independent when IFN-I was blocked, preexisting T help assured their sustainability under conditions of IFN-I–driven inflammation by instructing a germinal center B cell transcriptional program. Prevention of decimation depended on T cell–intrinsic Bcl6 and Tfh progeny formation. Antigen presentation by B cells, interactions with antigen-specific T helper cells, and costimulation by CD40 and ICOS were also required. Importantly, B cell–mediated virus control averted Th1-driven immunopathology in LCMV-challenged animals with preexisting CD4 T cell immunity. Our findings show that vaccination-induced Tfh cells represent a cornerstone of effective B cell immunity to chronic virus challenge, pointing the way toward more effective B cell–based vaccination against persistent viral diseases.

Funder

EC | FP7 | FP7 Ideas: European Research Council

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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