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Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study

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Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study. / Yang, Bingyi; García-Carreras, Bernardo; Lessler, Justin et al.
In: eLife, Vol. 11, e81457, 16.12.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Yang, B, García-Carreras, B, Lessler, J, Read, JM, Zhu, H, Metcalf, CJE, Hay, JA, Kwok, KO, Shen, R, Jiang, CQ, Guan, Y, Riley, S & Cummings, DA 2022, 'Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study', eLife, vol. 11, e81457. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.81457

APA

Yang, B., García-Carreras, B., Lessler, J., Read, J. M., Zhu, H., Metcalf, C. J. E., Hay, J. A., Kwok, K. O., Shen, R., Jiang, C. Q., Guan, Y., Riley, S., & Cummings, D. A. (2022). Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study. eLife, 11, Article e81457. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.81457

Vancouver

Yang B, García-Carreras B, Lessler J, Read JM, Zhu H, Metcalf CJE et al. Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study. eLife. 2022 Dec 16;11:e81457. Epub 2022 Dec 2. doi: 10.7554/elife.81457

Author

Yang, Bingyi ; García-Carreras, Bernardo ; Lessler, Justin et al. / Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2) : an observational and modeling study. In: eLife. 2022 ; Vol. 11.

Bibtex

@article{65d159948a514bd9a1faa97037a9ec54,
title = "Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2): an observational and modeling study",
abstract = "Background: Over a life course, human adaptive immunity to antigenically mutable pathogens exhibits competitive and facilitative interactions. We hypothesize that such interactions may lead to cyclic dynamics in immune responses over a lifetime. Methods: To investigate the cyclic behavior, we analyzed hemagglutination inhibition titers against 21 historical influenza A(H3N2) strains spanning 47 years from a cohort in Guangzhou, China, and applied Fourier spectrum analysis. To investigate possible biological mechanisms, we simulated individual antibody profiles encompassing known feedbacks and interactions due to generally recog-nized immunological mechanisms. Results: We demonstrated a long-term periodicity (about 24 years) in individual antibody responses. The reported cycles were robust to analytic and sampling approaches. Simulations suggested that individual-level cross-reaction between antigenically similar strains likely explains the reported cycle. We showed that the reported cycles are predictable at both individual and birth cohort level and that cohorts show a diversity of phases of these cycles. Phase of cycle was associated with the risk of seroconversion to circulating strains, after accounting for age and pre-existing titers of the circulating strains. Conclusions: Our findings reveal the existence of long-term periodicities in individual antibody responses to A(H3N2). We hypothesize that these cycles are driven by preexisting antibody responses blunting responses to antigenically similar pathogens (by preventing infection and/or robust antibody responses upon infection), leading to reductions in antigen-specific responses over time until individual{\textquoteright}s increasing risk leads to an infection with an antigenically distant enough virus to generate a robust immune response. These findings could help disentangle cohort effects from individual-level exposure histories, improve our understanding of observed heterogeneous antibody responses to immunizations, and inform targeted vaccine strategy.",
keywords = "General Immunology and Microbiology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Medicine, General Neuroscience",
author = "Bingyi Yang and Bernardo Garc{\'i}a-Carreras and Justin Lessler and Read, {Jonathan M} and Huachen Zhu and Metcalf, {C Jessica E} and Hay, {James A} and Kwok, {Kin O} and Ruiyun Shen and Jiang, {Chao Q} and Yi Guan and Steven Riley and Cummings, {Derek A}",
year = "2022",
month = dec,
day = "16",
doi = "10.7554/elife.81457",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
journal = "eLife",
issn = "2050-084X",
publisher = "eLife Sciences Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Long term intrinsic cycling in human life course antibody responses to influenza A(H3N2)

T2 - an observational and modeling study

AU - Yang, Bingyi

AU - García-Carreras, Bernardo

AU - Lessler, Justin

AU - Read, Jonathan M

AU - Zhu, Huachen

AU - Metcalf, C Jessica E

AU - Hay, James A

AU - Kwok, Kin O

AU - Shen, Ruiyun

AU - Jiang, Chao Q

AU - Guan, Yi

AU - Riley, Steven

AU - Cummings, Derek A

PY - 2022/12/16

Y1 - 2022/12/16

N2 - Background: Over a life course, human adaptive immunity to antigenically mutable pathogens exhibits competitive and facilitative interactions. We hypothesize that such interactions may lead to cyclic dynamics in immune responses over a lifetime. Methods: To investigate the cyclic behavior, we analyzed hemagglutination inhibition titers against 21 historical influenza A(H3N2) strains spanning 47 years from a cohort in Guangzhou, China, and applied Fourier spectrum analysis. To investigate possible biological mechanisms, we simulated individual antibody profiles encompassing known feedbacks and interactions due to generally recog-nized immunological mechanisms. Results: We demonstrated a long-term periodicity (about 24 years) in individual antibody responses. The reported cycles were robust to analytic and sampling approaches. Simulations suggested that individual-level cross-reaction between antigenically similar strains likely explains the reported cycle. We showed that the reported cycles are predictable at both individual and birth cohort level and that cohorts show a diversity of phases of these cycles. Phase of cycle was associated with the risk of seroconversion to circulating strains, after accounting for age and pre-existing titers of the circulating strains. Conclusions: Our findings reveal the existence of long-term periodicities in individual antibody responses to A(H3N2). We hypothesize that these cycles are driven by preexisting antibody responses blunting responses to antigenically similar pathogens (by preventing infection and/or robust antibody responses upon infection), leading to reductions in antigen-specific responses over time until individual’s increasing risk leads to an infection with an antigenically distant enough virus to generate a robust immune response. These findings could help disentangle cohort effects from individual-level exposure histories, improve our understanding of observed heterogeneous antibody responses to immunizations, and inform targeted vaccine strategy.

AB - Background: Over a life course, human adaptive immunity to antigenically mutable pathogens exhibits competitive and facilitative interactions. We hypothesize that such interactions may lead to cyclic dynamics in immune responses over a lifetime. Methods: To investigate the cyclic behavior, we analyzed hemagglutination inhibition titers against 21 historical influenza A(H3N2) strains spanning 47 years from a cohort in Guangzhou, China, and applied Fourier spectrum analysis. To investigate possible biological mechanisms, we simulated individual antibody profiles encompassing known feedbacks and interactions due to generally recog-nized immunological mechanisms. Results: We demonstrated a long-term periodicity (about 24 years) in individual antibody responses. The reported cycles were robust to analytic and sampling approaches. Simulations suggested that individual-level cross-reaction between antigenically similar strains likely explains the reported cycle. We showed that the reported cycles are predictable at both individual and birth cohort level and that cohorts show a diversity of phases of these cycles. Phase of cycle was associated with the risk of seroconversion to circulating strains, after accounting for age and pre-existing titers of the circulating strains. Conclusions: Our findings reveal the existence of long-term periodicities in individual antibody responses to A(H3N2). We hypothesize that these cycles are driven by preexisting antibody responses blunting responses to antigenically similar pathogens (by preventing infection and/or robust antibody responses upon infection), leading to reductions in antigen-specific responses over time until individual’s increasing risk leads to an infection with an antigenically distant enough virus to generate a robust immune response. These findings could help disentangle cohort effects from individual-level exposure histories, improve our understanding of observed heterogeneous antibody responses to immunizations, and inform targeted vaccine strategy.

KW - General Immunology and Microbiology

KW - General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

KW - General Medicine

KW - General Neuroscience

U2 - 10.7554/elife.81457

DO - 10.7554/elife.81457

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36458815

VL - 11

JO - eLife

JF - eLife

SN - 2050-084X

M1 - e81457

ER -