Author:
Gorshkova Ekaterina N.,Lecerf Maxime,Astrakhantseva Irina V.,Vasilenko Ekaterina A.,Starkina Olga V.,Ilyukina Natalya A.,Dimitrova Petya A.,Dimitrov Jordan D.,Vassilev Tchavdar L.
Abstract
AbstractPrevious studies have shown that polyreactive antibodies play an important role in the frontline defense against the dissemination of pathogens in the pre-immune host. Interestingly, antigen-binding polyreactivity can not only be inherent, but also acquired post-translationally. The ability of individual monoclonal IgG and IgE antibodies to acquire polyreactivity following contact with various agents that destabilize protein structure (urea, low pH) or have pro-oxidative potential (heme, ferrous ions) has been studied in detail. However, to the best of our knowledge this property of human IgA has previously been described only cursorily. In the present study pooled human serum IgA and two human monoclonal IgA antibodies were exposed to buffers with acidic pH, to free heme or to ferrous ions, and the antigen-binding behavior of the native and modified IgA to viral and bacterial antigens were compared using immunoblot and ELISA. We observed a dose-dependent increase in reactivity to several bacterial extracts and to pure viral antigens. This newly described property of IgA may have therapeutic potential as has already been shown for pooled IgG with induced polyreactivity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory