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Late induction of IgG4 following SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in pregnant and non-pregnant individuals includes clonotypes raised early in the response

Kansara, D. N.; Yu, T.-G.; Kansara, N.; Taher, N. M.; Yesbalatova, A.; DeBrabandere, L.; Weiner, J. A.; Kovacikova, G.; Hederman, A. P.; Pannus, P.; Depickere, S.; Goosens, M. E.; Vercoutere, A.; Dauby, N.; Arien, K. K.; Maertens, K.; Marchant, A.; Lee, J.; Ackerman, M. E.

2026-05-29 immunology
10.64898/2026.05.29.728639 bioRxiv
Show abstract

To better understand how pregnancy impacts humoral immunity, we conducted an in-depth longitudinal analysis of the kinetics and characteristics of vaccine responses in a prospective cohort of pregnant and non-pregnant women. Humoral immune responses observed among pregnant participants who received the mRNA-delivered SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, including their effector functions, were in some cases marginally lower than those among non-pregnant controls, while prior infection was associated with some potentiation in humoral responses. Importantly, vaccine-induced antibodies were efficiently transferred across the placenta, providing the fetus with passive immunity and underscoring the dual benefit of maternal vaccination for both mother and neonate against COVID-19. Delayed induction of spike-specific IgG4 following the primary two-dose vaccination series was observed in vaccine recipients, independent of pregnancy status. In a subset (n=6) of pregnant women whose spike-specific serum IgG repertoires were extensively profiled at the clonotypic level over time as part of another study, we proteomically identified secreted IgG clonotypes that had class-switched to IgG4. Matching of these clonotypes detected as IgG4 to those defined as SARS-CoV-2 spike-specific revealed that, while a minority of total clonotypes, they were elicited early in the immunization series and tended to be more highly mutated, more prevalent, and more persistent than clonotypes in the serological repertoire that were not detected as IgG4. Consistent with the increase in secreted vaccine-specific IgG4 over time, but its poorer placental transfer, these clonotypes were detected at greater levels in maternal but not cord blood at the time of delivery as compared to 28 days post the second vaccine dose. These findings indicate some impact in the kinetics, characteristics, and functions of the humoral response that may be associated with pregnancy-related immune modulation. Conservation of the late class-switch recombination to IgG4 that has previously been associated with mRNA-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccines raises questions about how different immunological states and vaccine components influence short- and long-term characteristics of the humoral immune response.

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