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    Distinct antibody repertoires against endemic human coronaviruses in children and adults.

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    144499.1-20210122150219-covered-253bed37ca4c1ab43d105aefdf7b5536.pdf (4.206Mb)
    Date
    2021-01-01
    Author
    Khan, Taushif
    Rahman, Mahbuba
    Al Ali, Fatima
    Huang, Susie Sy
    Ata, Manar
    Zhang, Qian
    Bastard, Paul
    Liu, Zhiyong
    Jouanguy, Emmanuelle
    Beziat, Vivien
    Cobat, Aurélie
    Nasrallah, Gheyath K
    Yassine, Hadi M
    Smatti, Maria K
    Saeed, Amira
    Vandernoot, Isabelle
    Goffard, Jean-Christophe
    Smits, Guillaume
    Migeotte, Isabelle
    Haerynck, Filomeen
    Meyts, Isabelle
    Abel, Laurent
    Casanova, Jean-Laurent
    Hasan, Mohammad R
    Marr, Nico
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Four endemic human coronaviruses (HCoVs) are commonly associated with acute respiratory infection in humans. B cell responses to these "common cold" viruses remain incompletely understood. Here we report a comprehensive analysis of CoV-specific antibody repertoires in 231 children and 1168 adults using phage-immunoprecipitation sequencing. Seroprevalence of antibodies to endemic HCoVs ranged between ~4 and 27% depending on the species and cohort. We identified at least 136 novel linear B cell epitopes. Antibody repertoires against endemic HCoVs were qualitatively different between children and adults in that anti-HCoV IgG specificities more frequently found among children targeted functionally important and structurally conserved regions of the spike, nucleocapsid and matrix proteins. Moreover, antibody specificities targeting the highly conserved fusion peptide region and S2' cleavage site of the spike protein were broadly cross-reactive with peptides of epidemic human and non-human coronaviruses. In contrast, an acidic tandem repeat in the N-terminal region of the Nsp3 subdomain of the HCoV-HKU1 polyprotein was the predominant target of antibody responses in adult donors. Our findings shed light on the dominant species-specific and pan-CoV target sites of human antibody responses to coronavirus infection, thereby providing important insights for the development of prophylactic or therapeutic monoclonal antibodies and vaccine design.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.144499
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/17767
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    • Biomedical Research Center Research [‎800‎ items ]
    • Biomedical Sciences [‎819‎ items ]
    • COVID-19 Research [‎849‎ items ]

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