Antibody genetics II - The Secondary response and increasing affinity Flashcards

1
Q

B cell activation

A
  • B cell development does not require Ag
  • B cells rearrange their genes and express surface IgM (BCR) in the bone
    marrow
  • B cells then enter the circulation where they may encounter Ag in the
    secondary lymph organs
  • If they don’t encounter Ag they die within a few weeks
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2
Q

Describe T-independent (TI) Ag

A

*particularly resistant to degradation
* 2 groups based on the manner in which they activate B cells: TI-1 & TI-2
* Generate IgM and don’t induce memory
*TI antigens don’t usually a response leading to class switching or to an increase in antibody affinity, as seen with TD antigens due to the lack of CD40 activation.
* Tend to activate CD5+ B-cells (B-1)
*predominantly activate the B-1 subset (can replenish themselves) of B cells found mainly in the peritoneum. They can be identified by their expression of CD5, which is induced upon binding of TI antigens.

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3
Q

Describe TI-1 antigens

A

*mainly bacterial cell wall components e.g. LPS. *In high concentrations they can polyclonally activate B cells.
*in lower concentrations they only activate B cells specific for themselves
*do not require a second signal
* Several signal transduction molecules are necessary for mediating TI antigen responses in B cells. These include CD19, HS1 protein and Lyn

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4
Q

Describe TI-2 antigens

A

*predominantly large polysaccharides with repeating antigenic determinants eg Ficoll, poliomyelitis virus, dextran, polymeric bacterial flagellin.
*thought to activate B-cells by clustering and cross-linking immunoglobulin molecules on the B cell surface, leading to prolonged and persistent signaling
* require residual non-cognate T-cell help, such as cytokines

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5
Q

Describe T-dependent (TD) response

A
  • T cells and B cells recognise different parts of the antigen
    (Mitchison 1960-70)
  • B cells see the epitope using antibodies, T cells see processed peptide fragment.
  • T cells need peptide presented on APC e.g. Dendritic cells
  • T helper cells

Therefore two processes are required to activate a B cell:
* antigen interacting with B cell immunoglobulin receptors – this involves ‘native’ antigen;
* stimulating signal(s) from TH cells that respond to processed antigen bound to MHC class II molecules.

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6
Q

T and B cell interaction

A
  • Complex process between a Th cell and an Ag specific B cell, 2-way interaction
  • Surface IgM binds Ag and internalizes it
  • Peptide presented on MHCII
  • TCR and MHC polarise on cell surfaces
  • Co-stimulatory molecules bind (CD40-CD40L interaction helps to drive B cells into the cell cycle, this transduction of signals induces upregulation of CD80/86
    *Signaling through CD40 is also essential for germinal center development and antibody responses to TD antigens
  • Cytokines produced by Th2 cells (IL-4, 5, 6, 10 & 13) promote B cell activation and production of IgG1 and IgE
  • B cell proliferate and differentiate into memory cells or AFC
  • T-follicular helper cells, localise to germinal centres and produce IL-21 (critical for germinal centre formation) and direct Ig class switching
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7
Q

Th2 cytokines in B cell response

A
  • IL-4: Induces activation and differentiation in B cells. It also acts on T cells as a growth factor
    and promotes differentiation of TH2 cells. excess IL-4 plays a part in allergic disease, causing production of IgE;
  • IL-5: Similar effect. A growth and activation factor for eosinophils and is responsible for the eosinophilia of parasitic disease
  • IL-6: Also produced by other cell types (macrophages, B cells, fibroblasts and endothelial cells) and acts on many cell types, but induces B cells to become AFC
  • IL-10: Growth and differentiation of B cells, blocks Th1 cells
  • IL-13: shares a receptor component and signaling pathways with IL-4, acts on B cells to produce IgE
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8
Q

B cell activation - two outcomes

A

– Proliferation and differentiation into antibody forming cells in the lymph nodes or in the periarteriolar lymphoid sheath of the spleen. These AFCs secrete Ab to clear Ag, mostly die within 2 weeks via apoptosis)

– Production of memory B cells, long lived and responsible for long term Ab production
– Occurs in the germinal centres of the secondary lymphoid tissue, spleen (PALS- periarteriolar lymphatic sheath) and lymph nodes.

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9
Q

Sequence of events in B cell activation

A
  • Antigen taken up by DCs (TLR etc)
  • DCs activate Th in Lymph node (DC only cell to activate naïve T cells)
  • B cells in the lymphoid tissue activated by soluble Ag
  • B cells present to T cells and get some Ig production-extrafollicular activation, low level somatic mutation.
  • Some T cells develop into T follicular helper cells and these cells move to follicles
  • B cells move to follicles
  • T and B cells cooperate to form germinal centres where extensive somatic hypermutation, affinity maturation and Ig class switching takes place
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10
Q

Describe Ig Class switching and what it is determined by

A
  • Heavy chain isotype switches to IgG and IgA
  • Occurs in the secondary response
  • Happens in the germinal centre
  • Adds plasticity to the response
  • Determines the functionality of the antibody
  • Immunoglobulin class expression is influenced by cytokines and type of antigenic stimulus
    *It is mostly achieved by gene recombination
    *It may be achieved by differential splicing of mRNA
    *Class switching occurs during maturation
    and proliferation
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11
Q

Cytokine control

A
  • Cytokines produced in immune response direct the way in which class switch goes eg:
    – Th1 cells are activated by viruses and bacteria to produce IFN-gamma. This causes switch to IgG- main complement fixing isotype.
    – Helminths produce IL-4 from Th2, IL-4 directs
    IgE production which target esoinophils to
    helminths
    – Mucosal tissue results in the switch to IgA under the influence of TGFb
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12
Q

Describe CD40-CD40L interactopm

A
  • CD40, a member of the TNF receptor family, delivers a strong activating signal to B cells,
  • upon activation, T cells transiently express a CD40L which interacts with CD40;
  • CD40–CD40L interaction helps to drive B cells into cell cycle;
  • transduction of signals through CD40 induces upregulation of CD80/CD86 and therefore helps to provide further costimulatory signals to the responding T cells.
  • It also induces the expression of Activation-induced deaminase (AID)
  • Involved in both class switching and somatic hypermutation
  • In mice and humans with no CD40, CD40L or AID most Ig is M
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13
Q

Switch recombination

A
  • Rearranged VDJ exon which encodes the heavy chain V domain recombines with a new C region
  • The intervening DNA is deleted
  • Switch regions in the introns between J and each CH region.
  • Upstream of the switch (S) region, there is an initiation (I) sequence.
  • Transcription occurs along the strand but strand breaks occur at the switch regions
  • The Sm strand break then recombines with the selected downstream switch region
    determined by cytokines
  • Translation of the protein composed of original VDJ and new C
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14
Q

AID: activation-induced deaminase

A

*AID = a DNA-editing enzyme that replaces
deoxycytidine residues with deoxyuracil in the DNA of the immunoglobulin heavy chain switch regions.

*The resulting mismatch in the DNA is recognized by the enzyme uracil N-glycosylase (UNG) that removes the deoxy-uracil residues,
leaving abasic sites that are resolved by means of DNA repair mechanisms.

*These DNA modifications trigger both CSR and somatic hypermutation.

*Dramatic expansion of germinal centers ( tonsil and lymph node enlargement), and the lack of susceptibility to opportunistic infections distinguish hyper-IgM syndrome due to AID and UNG mutations from the forms due to defects of CD40L or CD40.

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15
Q

What is the effect of AID and UNG mutations?

What is the treatment of AID deficiency?

A

*Both AID and UNG mutations cause severe deficiency of IgG, IgA, and IgE production. Furthermore, the immunoglobulins (almost entirely IgM) produced by these patients have low affinity for the antigen

*Treatment of AID and UNG deficiency is based on administration of immunoglobulins.

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16
Q

Somatic hypermutation and affinity maturation

A

*somatic hypermutation, which leads to the generation of cells with a wide range of affinities for antigen;
* Generates point mutations in the Ig V genes, specific for a particular Ag
* Selects for increased affinity and deletes low affinity Ig
* Occurs in the dark zone of the germinal centres
* Requires T cell help and CD40:CD40L (AID)
* Point mutations occur at 1000x spontaneous rate
(hypermutation)
* Point mutations can accumulate in progeny cells
* Partially understood!
* AID: C to U, then upon DNA replication this can convert to T, therefore C to T mutation, strand breaks and repair can cause errors
* Most mutations will result in lack of binding and so a reduced affinity Ab
* Some will increase affinity for Ag: resulting in high affinity Ab
* Need selection

17
Q

Describe the experiment on Somatic mutations in Ig V genes in mice

A

Mouse injected with Ag (Oxalosone and protein). Spleen cells taken out and hybridomas made. Isolated McAb to Ag and sequenced V regions.
Higher affinity

18
Q

Overview of B cell selection

A

FDC express C’ receptors and FcR. They ‘hold’ Ag bound to these structures and display them to B cells

TFH cells produce IL-21 which drives B cells into apoptosis unless they are ‘rescued’ by Ag recognition (Bcl-2 induction, further CD40 interaction with TFH.

As maturation continues [Ag] drops so select for higher and higher affinity B cells.

19
Q

Plasma cells and memory B cells

A
  • Plasma cells home to the bone marrow where they survive for long periods producing Ab
  • Memory B cells express high levels of Bcl-2 contributes to the long life-span
  • Some stay in Ln, some recirculate
20
Q

So how do we get >108 B cell specificities from 35000 genes?

A
  • Two chains per receptor
  • Multiple V (D) J segments
  • Junctional diversity
  • Somatic hypermutation
  • C region switching