Frontiers in Microbiology (Jan 2021)

Decrease of Clone Diversity in IgM Repertoires of HBV Chronically Infected Individuals With High Level of Viral Replication

  • Binbin Hong,
  • Lizhi Wang,
  • Chunlan Huang,
  • Xiaoju Hong,
  • Alan Liu,
  • Qiulan Li,
  • Qiaoling Liu,
  • Lili Su,
  • Lixing Wang,
  • Chunyu Wang,
  • Tianlei Ying

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.615669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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High-throughput antibody sequencing allows in-depth insights into human antibody repertoires. To investigate the characteristics of antibody repertoires in patients with chronic HBV infection, we performed Illumina sequencing and IMGT/HighV-QUEST analysis of B lymphocytes from healthy adults and the HBV carriers with high or low level of viral replication. The comparative study revealed high levels of similarity between the IgM and IgG repertoires of the HBV carriers and the healthy adults, including the somatic mutations in V regions, the average CDR3 length, and the occurrence of junctional modifications. Nevertheless, the diversity of the unique clones decreased and some clusters of unique clones expanded in the IgM repertoire of chronic HBV carriers (CHB) compared with healthy adults (HH) and inactive HBV carriers (IHB). Such difference in clone diversity and expansion was not observed in the IgG repertoires of the three populations. More shared antibody clones were found between the IgM repertoires of IHB and HH than that found between CHB and HH (7079 clones vs. 2304 clones). Besides, the biased used IGHD genes were IGHD2-2 and IGHD3-3 in CHB library but were IGHD3-10 and IGHD3-22 in IHB and HH library. In contrast, for IgG repertories, the preferred used VDJ genes were similar in all the three populations. These results indicated that low level of serum HBV might not induce significant changes in BCR repertoires, and high level of HBV replication could have more impacts on IgM repertories than IgG repertoires. Taken together, our findings provide a better understanding of the antibody repertoires of HBV chronically infected individuals.

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