Affinity maturation for an optimal balance between long-term immune coverage and short-term resource constraints

26 Jul 2021  ·  Victor Chardès, Massimo Vergassola, Aleksandra M. Walczak, Thierry Mora ·

In order to target threatening pathogens, the adaptive immune system performs a continuous reorganization of its lymphocyte repertoire. Following an immune challenge, the B cell repertoire can evolve cells of increased specificity for the encountered strain. This process of affinity maturation generates a memory pool whose diversity and size remain difficult to predict. We assume that the immune system follows a strategy that maximizes the long-term immune coverage and minimizes the short-term metabolic costs associated with affinity maturation. This strategy is defined as an optimal decision process on a finite dimensional phenotypic space, where a pre-existing population of naive cells is sequentially challenged with a neutrally evolving strain. We unveil a trade-off between immune protection against future strains and the necessary reorganization of the repertoire. This plasticity of the repertoire drives the emergence of distinct regimes for the size and diversity of the memory pool, depending on the density of naive cells and on the mutation rate of the strain. The model predicts power-law distributions of clonotype sizes observed in data, and rationalizes antigenic imprinting as a strategy to minimize metabolic costs while keeping good immune protection against future strains.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods


No methods listed for this paper. Add relevant methods here