Immune profiling of mpox survivors reveals divergent durability of antibody and T cell responses.
Yanqun Wang, Ruoxi Cai, Airu Zhu, Jiantao Chen, Canjie Chen, Lijuan Zhou, Xindan Xing, Qier Zhong, Peilan Wei, Xinxin Li, Zhaoyong Zhang, Yuanyuan Zhang, Lei Chen, Jingjing Gao, Suxiang Li
Abstract
Open AccessDespite the global spread of mpox virus (MPXV), the durability and breadth of infection-induced immunity remain incompletely defined. Here, we comprehensively characterize MPXV-specific antibody and T cell responses up to 18 months after natural infection in male individuals. Neutralizing antibodies exhibit typical acute viral kinetics, with titers peaking early and declining over time, from a mean of 328 at 12 months to 180 at 18 months post-infection. Neutralization analyses against MPXV clade Ib, clade IIb and VACV WR strains demonstrate pronounced cross-neutralization among orthopoxviruses, but with lineage-specific reductions in neutralization, indicating incomplete cross-reactivity across different lineages. In parallel, MPXV-specific CD4⁺ and Tfh cell responses remain robust and polyfunctional throughout follow-up, and CD8⁺ T cells maintain sustained responses characterized by cytokine production, together supporting durable cellular immunity. These findings offer critical insights into the durability and breadth of post-infection immunity, with implications for reinfection risk and orthopoxvirus vaccine strategies.