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Malaria exposure drives both cognate and bystander human B cells to adopt an atypical phenotype

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Authors

Aye, Racheal
Sutton, Harry
Nduati, Eunice W.
Kai, Oscar
Mwacharo, Jedida
Musyoki, Jennifer
Otieno, Edward
Wambua, Juliana
Bejon, Philip
Cockburn, Ian

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Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley-VCH Verlag GMBH

Abstract

Atypical memory B cells (aMBCs) are found in elevated numbers in individuals exposed to malaria. A key question is whether malaria induces aMBCs as a result of exposure to Ag, or non‐Ag‐specific mechanisms. We identified Plasmodium and bystander tetanus toxoid (TT) specific B cells in individuals from areas of previous and persistent exposure to malaria using tetramers. Malaria‐specific B cells were more likely to be aMBCs than TT‐specific B cells. However, TT‐specific B cells from individuals with continuous exposure to malaria were more likely to be aMBCs than TT‐specific B cells in individuals from areas where transmission has ceased. Finally, sequences of BCRs specific for a blood stage malaria‐Ag were more highly mutated than sequences from TT‐specific BCRs and under strong negative selection, indicative of ongoing antigenic pressure. Our data suggest both persistent Ag exposure and the inflammatory environment shape the B‐cell response to malaria and bystander Ags.

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Citation

Source

European Journal of Immunology

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Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution License

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