High microbiota reactivity of adult human intestinal IgA requires somatic mutations

Author:

Kabbert Johanna1,Benckert Julia23,Rollenske Tim4,Hitch Thomas C.A.5,Clavel Thomas5,Cerovic Vuk1,Wardemann Hedda4,Pabst Oliver1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Molecular Medicine, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

2. Max Planck Research Group Molecular Immunology, Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, Germany

3. Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Berlin, Germany

4. B Cell Immunology, German Cancer Research Centre, Heidelberg, Germany

5. Functional Microbiome Research Group, Institute of Medical Microbiology, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University, Aachen, Germany

Abstract

The gut is home to the body’s largest population of plasma cells. In healthy individuals, IgA is the dominating isotype, whereas patients with inflammatory bowel disease also produce high concentrations of IgG. In the gut lumen, secretory IgA binds pathogens and toxins but also the microbiota. However, the antigen specificity of IgA and IgG for the microbiota and underlying mechanisms of antibody binding to bacteria are largely unknown. Here we show that microbiota binding is a defining property of human intestinal antibodies in both healthy and inflamed gut. Some bacterial taxa were commonly targeted by different monoclonal antibodies, whereas others selectively bound single antibodies. Interestingly, individual human monoclonal antibodies from both healthy and inflamed intestines bound phylogenetically unrelated bacterial species. This microbiota cross-species reactivity did not correlate with antibody polyreactivity but was crucially dependent on the accumulation of somatic mutations. Therefore, our data suggest that a system of affinity-matured, microbiota cross-species–reactive IgA is a common aspect of SIgA–microbiota interactions in the gut.

Funder

Faculty of Medicine at RWTH Aachen University

Behrens Weise Foundation

German Research Foundation

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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