• Hepatitis B: Natural controllers shed li

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Aug 13 21:30:38 2020
    Hepatitis B: Natural controllers shed light on immunity mechanisms


    Date:
    August 13, 2020
    Source:
    Institut Pasteur
    Summary:
    To improve our understanding of the antibody response conferring
    protection against HBV infection, scientists have produced
    and characterized human monoclonal antibodies specific to viral
    envelope antigens, referred as HBsAg, from blood memory B cells
    isolated from HBV vaccinees and natural controllers.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Infections in humans caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV) represent
    a major public health problem. Despite the availability of effective
    protective vaccines, more than 250 million individuals worldwide are chronically infected according to WHO estimates. HBV infection is
    associated with cirrhosis, liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma, responsible for approximately a million deaths every year. To date
    there is no specific treatment to completely eliminate the virus and
    provide a cure for chronic HBV infection. Strikingly, however, about 1%
    of individuals with chronic HBV infection, known as natural controllers,
    are capable of recovering spontaneously. To improve our understanding
    of the antibody response conferring protection against HBV infection, scientists from the Institut Pasteur and Inserm, in collaboration with
    the Roche Innovation Center in Switzerland, produced and characterized
    human monoclonal antibodies specific to viral envelope antigens, referred
    as HBsAg, from blood memory B cells isolated from HBV vaccinees and
    natural controllers.


    ========================================================================== Hepatitis B is one of the major human diseases: it is estimated that
    2 billion people have been infected with the virus and more than 250
    million are chronic carriers capable of transmitting the virus over many
    years. Chronic carriers are exposed to a high risk of death from liver cirrhosis or liver cancer, diseases that claim around a million lives
    every year (see our fact sheet).

    There are no drugs available to treat acute hepatitis and improve the
    chances of recovery. But some rare patients, known as natural controllers, undergo seroconversion -- they develop antibodies against the virus
    that can be detected in the blood, conferring protection against the
    disease similarly to vaccination. In response to HBV infection, specific antibodies produced by immune cells called B lymphocytes recognize HBsAg,
    some of which being able to block viral infection (neutralization) and propagation by destroying infected liver cells (hepatocytes). Thus,
    such antibodies appear to play a crucial role in eliminating HBV and
    protecting against infection.

    New therapeutic avenue for the treatment of hepatitis B virus To
    investigate the antibody response involved in the protection against HBV infection and analyze in details the properties of the antibodies directed against the virus, the laboratory of Humoral Immunology (Institut Pasteur
    / INSERM U1222), in collaboration with the Roche Innovation Center in Switzerland, scientists from the units led by James Di Santo and Pierre Charneau (Institut Pasteur), and the teams led by Stanislas Pol (Cochin Hospital) and Camille Sureau (French Blood Transfusion Institute (INTS)), produced and characterized about a hundred human monoclonal antibodies
    specific to the HBV surface antigens (HBsAg) expressed by memory B cells isolated from the blood of vaccinees and individuals cured of chronic
    infection (natural controllers). "The study shows that vaccinees and
    natural controllers are capable of generating a wide array of antibodies targeting different regions of HBsAg" explains Hugo Mouquet, Head of the Humoral Immunology Laboratory at the Institut Pasteur and investigator
    for the study. The vast majority of anti- HBsAg antibodies produced in controllers are neutralizing and capable of reacting with different HBV subtypes circulating worldwide. Apart from their neutralizing ability
    in vitro at low concentrations, the antibody candidates tested in mouse
    models of HBV infection led in vivo to a substantial drop in viremia --
    the level of viral particles in the blood for a given virus.

    Importantly, the passive administration of the broadly neutralizing
    antibody Bc1.187, isolated from a controller subject, into infected mice
    led to a drastic decrease of viremia and in some mice, to a long-term post-therapy control of the infection.

    "The neutralizing antibodies directed against HBsAg thus appear to play
    a key role in the natural control of infection in chronically infected patients," continues Hugo Mouquet. The antibody Bc1.187 represents
    a highly promising therapeutic tool for the treatment of patients
    with chronic HBV infection and/ or an alternative to the polyclonal immunoglobulins used in some indications to prevent transmission of the
    virus in humans.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Institut_Pasteur. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Verena Hehle, Maxime Beretta, Maryline Bourgine, Malika
    Ait-Goughoulte,
    Cyril Planchais, Solen Morisse, Benjamin Vesin, Vale'rie Lorin,
    Thierry Hieu, Andrea Stauffer, Oriane Fiquet, Jordan D. Dimitrov,
    Marie-Louise Michel, Marie-Noe"lle Ungeheuer, Camille Sureau,
    Stanislas Pol, James P.

    Di Santo, He'le`ne Strick-Marchand, Nade`ge Pelletier, Hugo Mouquet.

    Potent human broadly neutralizing antibodies to hepatitis B virus
    from natural controllers. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2020;
    217 (10) DOI: 10.1084/jem.20200840 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/08/200813152252.htm

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