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Entering the spotlight: hepatitis B surface antigen–specific B cells
Christoph Neumann-Haefelin and Robert Thimme
First published September 17, 2018 - More info
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Abstract
Hepatitis B virus–specific (HBV-specific) T cells have been identified as main effector cells in HBV clearance. In contrast, B cells producing neutralizing antibodies against the HBV surface antigen (HBsAg) have been studied in little detail, mainly due to methodical limitations. In this issue of the JCI, two reports use a new technique to specifically detect and characterize HBsAg-specific B cells ex vivo. Indeed, these cells are present, but show phenotypic alterations and impaired function during acute and chronic HBV infection. Thus, HBsAg-specific B cells are a novel attractive target for antiviral strategies toward functional cure of chronic HBV infection.
Hepatitis B surface antibody in history and treatment
A fourth of the world’s population has been infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV), and an estimated 250 million people are chronically infected, putting them at risk for progressive liver disease, liver cirrhosis, liver failure, and hepatocellular carcinoma. Of adults infected with HBV, 95% clear the virus spontaneously, while 90% of newborns develop chronic infection. Since HBV infection does not induce an interferon response, HBV is a stealth virus with respect to the innate immune system (1, 2). Therefore, HBV clearance depends on a successful adaptive immune response. Indeed, a multispecific and vigorous HBV-specific CD8+ T cell response has been associated with viral clearance (3, 4), while HBV-specific CD8+ T cell exhaustion is a hallmark of persistent infection (5–7). Less attention, however, has been paid to the role of neutralizing antibodies targeting the envelope protein of HBV, the HBV surface antigen (HBsAg). Indeed, the hepatitis B surface antibody (anti-HBs) is only detectable in the blood of HBV-infected individuals after the loss of HBsAg, either upon the resolution of acute infection or in case of the rare event of spontaneous or drug-induced clearance of chronic HBV infection. Thus, anti-HBs is seen as not playing a major role in HBV clearance. Anti-HBs, on the other hand, has been established as a diagnostic tool, indicating protective immunity after acute-resolving HBV infection or vaccination as well as “functional cure” of chronic HBV infection (HBsAg to anti-HBs seroconversion). There are, however, several clinical observations that argue against such a minor role of anti-HBs. First, anti-HBs contained in hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) is well known to prevent vertical HBV transmission from infected mothers to newborns as well as reinfection of liver transplants in previously HBV-infected hosts. Second, B cell–depleting drugs used in oncology and rheumatology, such as the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab, induce HBV reactivation in HBV carriers and even in patients with “resolved” HBV in whom nuclear HBV cccDNA persists as a viral reservoir for decades (8). These clinical observations indicate that anti-HBs has a more prominent role than previously acknowledged. Indeed, anti-HBs can block HBV cell entry, either by blocking the binding site of HBsAg for the cell receptor recently identified to be sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP) or by binding to the “antigenic loop” of HBsAg that is involved in interaction with heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) in a prereceptor step of cell entry. In addition to direct inhibition of cell entry, anti-HBs also mediate endocytosis and subsequent neutralization of virions as well as Fc-mediated phagocytosis and killing of infected cells. In addition, anti-HBs, HBsAg, and additional components build immune complexes that can activate HBV-specific T cells (9). |
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