| Title | B cell imprinting in children impairs antibodies to the haemagglutinin stalk. |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2026 |
| Authors | Sun J, Jo G, Troxell CA, Fu Y, Hoezl R, Lv H, Abozeid HH, Teo QWen, Pholcharee T, McGrath JJC, Changrob S, Nelson SA, Yasuhara A, Huang M, Zheng N-Y, Chervin JC, Li L, Fernández-Quintero ML, Loeffler JR, Rodriguez AJ, Huang J, Swanson OM, Balmaseda A, Kuan G, Campredon L, E Allen K, Neumann G, Wu NC, Kawaoka Y, Krammer F, Mejias A, Ramilo O, Thomas PG, Gordon A, Ward AB, Han J, Wilson PC |
| Journal | Nature |
| Date Published | 2026 Mar 11 |
| ISSN | 1476-4687 |
| Abstract | Immune imprinting1 or original antigenic sin2 is a phenomenon whereby the immune system preferentially recalls its initial response to a related, often evolving pathogen after subsequent exposure. Despite its important implications for vaccine development, the causes of imprinting remain unclear. Here, to understand the basis and impact of imprinting by influenza A viruses, we characterized the B cell responses of young children after consecutive first infections with divergent H1N1 and H3N2 strains of influenza. Children had a primary but otherwise similar B cell response to that of adults. Adult B cells commonly cross-reacted with past strains using more stereotyped and mutated immunoglobulin genes, indicating substantial homosubtypic imprinting. In children, after consecutive heterosubtypic primary infections, up to 6% of memory B cells are H1/H3 cross-reactive and bind to the highly conserved central stalk epitope-a lead target for broadly protective vaccine candidates. Over 90% of these B cells had a higher affinity for the imprinting H3N2 strain, resulting in reduced breadth and neutralization potency against H1N1 strains. Mechanistically, the imprinting H3 strains and affected H1 strains shared a residue change in the stalk epitope (D46N) that was central to the nearly universal shift in reactivity, despite differing by only a single atomic group. In conclusion, imprinting by influenza viruses can cause a deleterious shift of nearly the entire memory recall response against key, conserved epitopes. |
| DOI | 10.1038/s41586-026-10248-6 |
| Custom 1 | |
| Alternate Journal | Nature |
| PubMed ID | 41813896 |
| PubMed Central ID | 5134739 |
