The current pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide (PPS) conjugate vaccine (PCV13) is less effective against Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 3 (ST3), which remains a major cause of pneumococcal disease and mortality. Therefore, dissecting structure-function relationships of human ST3 pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide (PPS3) antibodies may reveal characteristics of protective antibodies. Using flow cytometry, we isolated PPS3-binding memory B cells from pneumococcal vaccine recipients and generated seven PPS3-specific human monoclonal antibodies (humAbs). Five humAbs displayed ST3 opsonophagocytic activity, four induced ST3 agglutination , and four mediated both activities. Two humAbs, namely, C10 and C27, that used the same variable heavy (V) and light (V) chain domains (V3-9*01/V2-14*03) both altered ST3 gene expression ; however, C10 had fewer V somatic mutations, higher PPS3 affinity, and promoted ST3 opsonophagocytic and agglutinating activity, whereas C27 did not. In C57BL/6 mice, both humAbs reduced nasopharyngeal colonization with ST3 A66 and a clinical strain, B2, and prolonged survival following lethal A66 intraperitoneal infection, but only C10 protected against lethal intranasal infection with the clinical strain. After performing V swaps, C10V/C27V exhibited reduced ST3 binding and agglutination, but C27V/C10V binding was unchanged. However, both humAbs lost the ability to reduce colonization when their light chains were replaced. Our findings associate the ability of PPS3-specific humAbs to reduce colonization with ST3 agglutination and opsonophagocytic activity, and reveal an unexpected role for the V in their functional activity and . These findings also provide insights that may inform antibody-based therapy and identification of surrogates of vaccine efficacy against ST3. Despite the global success of vaccination with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines, serotype 3 (ST3) pneumococcus remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. In comparison to other vaccine-included serotypes, the ST3 pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide (PPS3) induces a weaker opsonophagocytic response, which is considered a correlate of vaccine efficacy. Previous studies of mouse PPS3 monoclonal antibodies identified ST3 agglutination as a correlate of reduced ST3 nasopharyngeal colonization in mice; however, neither the agglutinating ability of human vaccine-elicited PPS3 antibodies nor their ability to prevent experimental murine nasopharyngeal colonization has been studied. We generated and analyzed the functional and efficacy of human vaccine-elicited PPS3 monoclonal antibodies and found that ST3 agglutination associated with antibody affinity, protection , and limited somatic mutations in the light chain variable region. These findings provide new insights that may inform the development of antibody-based therapies and next-generation vaccines for ST3.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8579928PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/Spectrum.01446-21DOI Listing

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