Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function

While the majority of influenza-infected individuals show no or mild symptomatology, pregnant women are at higher risk of complications and infection-associated mortality. Although enhanced lung pathology and dysregulated hormones are thought to underlie adverse pregnancy outcomes following influenz...

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Main Authors: Dominika Swieboda, Elizabeth Q. Littauer, Jacob T. Beaver, Lisa K. Mills, Katherine M. Bricker, E. Stein Esser, Olivia Q. Antao, Dahnide T. Williams, Ioanna Skountzou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Immunology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01785/full
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spelling doaj-0d266326eb044293ae5f878fa76f309d2020-11-25T03:03:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242020-08-011110.3389/fimmu.2020.01785557731Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody FunctionDominika SwiebodaElizabeth Q. LittauerJacob T. BeaverLisa K. MillsKatherine M. BrickerE. Stein EsserOlivia Q. AntaoDahnide T. WilliamsIoanna SkountzouWhile the majority of influenza-infected individuals show no or mild symptomatology, pregnant women are at higher risk of complications and infection-associated mortality. Although enhanced lung pathology and dysregulated hormones are thought to underlie adverse pregnancy outcomes following influenza infection, how pregnancy confounds long-term maternal anti-influenza immunity remains to be elucidated. Previously, we linked seasonal influenza infection to clinical observations of adverse pregnancy outcomes, enhanced lung and placental histopathology, and reduced control of viral replication in lungs of infected pregnant mothers. Here, we expand on this work and demonstrate that lower infectious doses of the pandemic A/California/07/2009 influenza virus generated adverse gestational outcomes similar to higher doses of seasonal viruses. Mice infected during pregnancy demonstrated lower hemagglutination inhibition and neutralizing antibody titers than non-pregnant animals until 63 days post infection. These differences in humoral immunity suggest that pregnancy impacts antibody maturation mechanisms without alterations to B cell frequency or antibody secretion. This is further supported by transcriptional analysis of plasmablasts, which demonstrate downregulated B cell metabolism and post-translational modification systems only among pregnant animals. In sum, these findings corroborate a link between adverse pregnancy outcomes and severe pathology observed during pandemic influenza infection. Furthermore, our data propose that pregnancy directly confounds humoral responses following influenza infection which resolves post-partem. Additional studies are required to specify the involvement of plasmablast metabolism with early humoral immunity abnormalities to best guide vaccination strategies and improve our understanding of the immunological consequences of pregnancy.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01785/fullinfluenzapregnancyimmunologyhormonescellular immunityhumoral immunity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dominika Swieboda
Elizabeth Q. Littauer
Jacob T. Beaver
Lisa K. Mills
Katherine M. Bricker
E. Stein Esser
Olivia Q. Antao
Dahnide T. Williams
Ioanna Skountzou
spellingShingle Dominika Swieboda
Elizabeth Q. Littauer
Jacob T. Beaver
Lisa K. Mills
Katherine M. Bricker
E. Stein Esser
Olivia Q. Antao
Dahnide T. Williams
Ioanna Skountzou
Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
Frontiers in Immunology
influenza
pregnancy
immunology
hormones
cellular immunity
humoral immunity
author_facet Dominika Swieboda
Elizabeth Q. Littauer
Jacob T. Beaver
Lisa K. Mills
Katherine M. Bricker
E. Stein Esser
Olivia Q. Antao
Dahnide T. Williams
Ioanna Skountzou
author_sort Dominika Swieboda
title Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
title_short Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
title_full Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
title_fullStr Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
title_full_unstemmed Pregnancy Downregulates Plasmablast Metabolic Gene Expression Following Influenza Without Altering Long-Term Antibody Function
title_sort pregnancy downregulates plasmablast metabolic gene expression following influenza without altering long-term antibody function
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Immunology
issn 1664-3224
publishDate 2020-08-01
description While the majority of influenza-infected individuals show no or mild symptomatology, pregnant women are at higher risk of complications and infection-associated mortality. Although enhanced lung pathology and dysregulated hormones are thought to underlie adverse pregnancy outcomes following influenza infection, how pregnancy confounds long-term maternal anti-influenza immunity remains to be elucidated. Previously, we linked seasonal influenza infection to clinical observations of adverse pregnancy outcomes, enhanced lung and placental histopathology, and reduced control of viral replication in lungs of infected pregnant mothers. Here, we expand on this work and demonstrate that lower infectious doses of the pandemic A/California/07/2009 influenza virus generated adverse gestational outcomes similar to higher doses of seasonal viruses. Mice infected during pregnancy demonstrated lower hemagglutination inhibition and neutralizing antibody titers than non-pregnant animals until 63 days post infection. These differences in humoral immunity suggest that pregnancy impacts antibody maturation mechanisms without alterations to B cell frequency or antibody secretion. This is further supported by transcriptional analysis of plasmablasts, which demonstrate downregulated B cell metabolism and post-translational modification systems only among pregnant animals. In sum, these findings corroborate a link between adverse pregnancy outcomes and severe pathology observed during pandemic influenza infection. Furthermore, our data propose that pregnancy directly confounds humoral responses following influenza infection which resolves post-partem. Additional studies are required to specify the involvement of plasmablast metabolism with early humoral immunity abnormalities to best guide vaccination strategies and improve our understanding of the immunological consequences of pregnancy.
topic influenza
pregnancy
immunology
hormones
cellular immunity
humoral immunity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fimmu.2020.01785/full
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