Author:
Gutiérrez-González Matias,Fahad Ahmed S.,Ardito Matt,Nanaware Padma,Lu Liying,Normandin Erica,Madan Bharat,Tivin Jacob,Coates Emily,Henry Amy R.,Laboune Farida,Graham Barney S.,Douek Daniel C.,Ledgerwood Julie E.,Mascola John R.,Martin William D.,Stern Lawrence J.,De Groot Annie S.,DeKosky Brandon J.
Abstract
SummaryHuman antibody responses are established by the generation of combinatorial sequence diversity in antibody variable domains, followed by iterative rounds of mutation and selection via T cell recognition of antigen peptides presented on MHC-II. Here, we report that MHC-II peptide epitope deletion from B cell receptors (BCRs) correlates with antibody development in vivo. Large-scale antibody sequence analysis and experimental validation of peptide binding revealed that MHC-II epitope removal from BCRs is linked to genetic signatures of T cell help, and donor-specific antibody repertoire modeling demonstrated that somatic hypermutation selectively targets the personalized MHC-II epitopes in antibody variable regions. Mining of class-switched sequences and serum proteomic data revealed that MHC-II epitope deletion is associated with antibody class switching and long-term secretion into serum. These data suggest that the MHC-II peptide epitope content of a BCR is an important determinant of antibody maturation that shapes the composition and durability of humoral immunity.HighlightsAntibody somatic hypermutation selectively removes MHC-II peptide epitopes from B cell receptors.Antibodies with lower MHC-II epitope content show evidence of greater T cell help, including class-switching.MHC-II peptide epitope removal from a BCR is linked to long-term antibody secretion in serum.MHC-II genotype provides a personalized selection pressure on human antibody development.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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