JCI Insight (Oct 2021)

Human antibody recognition of H7N9 influenza virus HA following natural infection

  • Iuliia M. Gilchuk,
  • Sandhya Bangaru,
  • Nurgun Kose,
  • Robin G. Bombardi,
  • Andrew Trivette,
  • Sheng Li,
  • Hannah L. Turner,
  • Robert H. Carnahan,
  • Andrew B. Ward,
  • James E. Crowe Jr.

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 19

Abstract

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Avian H7N9 influenza viruses cause sporadic outbreaks of human infections and threaten to cause a major pandemic. The breadth of B cell responses to natural infection and the dominant antigenic sites recognized during first exposure to H7 HA following infection are incompletely understood. Here, we studied the B cell response to H7 HA of 2 individuals who had recovered from natural H7N9 virus infection. We used competition binding, hydrogen-deuterium mass spectrometry, and single-particle negative stain electron microscopy to identify the patterns of molecular recognition of the antibody responses to H7 HA. We found that circulating H7-reactive B cells recognized a diverse antigenic landscape on the HA molecule, including HA head domain epitopes in antigenic sites A and B and in the trimer interface-II region and epitopes in the stem region. Most H7 antibodies exhibited little heterosubtypic breadth, but many recognized a wide diversity of unrelated H7 strains. We tested the antibodies for functional activity and identified clones with diverse patterns of inhibition, including neutralizing, hemagglutination- or egress-inhibiting, or HA trimer–disrupting activities. Thus, the human B cell response to primary H7 natural infection is diverse, highly functional, and broad for recognition of diverse H7 strains.

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