Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular...

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Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7
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Transcript of Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular...

Page 1: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Antibody-ImmunoglobulinFunctionStructure

Antigen-antibody interactionAntibody isotypes

Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7

Page 2: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Web

Page 3: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

1. Two heavy chains and two light chains

2. Disulfide bonds3. Ig domains 4. Hinge region5. Constant and

variable regions6. Two identical

antigen-binding sites

7. Two function domains

a. Bind to antigensb. Recruit effector

cells and molecules7. Heavy chains

decide the class

Structures of antibodies

Page 4: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Determining Ab Structure• Work in 1950s and 60s using biochemical techniques• Rodney Porter used partial proteolysis with papain - 2

identical antigen-binding fragments (Fab) and one “tail” fragment (Fc)

• Alfred Nisinoff used pepsin - one fragment with divalent antigen binding (F(ab2)’)

• Gary Edelman used -ME to reduce Ig, resolving heavy (H) and light (L) chains

• Rodney Porter probed H and L chains with anti- Fab and anti-Fc antibodies: anti-Fab detected both H & L, but anti-Fc detected only H

• Combined work earned Porter and Edelman 1972 Nobel Prize

Page 5: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Fig. 3.3 The Y-shaped immunoglobulin molecule can be dissected by partial digestion with proteases.

Fab-Fragment antigen bindingFc-Fragment crystallizableFv-Fragment variable

Page 6: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Fine Structure of Ab• “Variable” (V) and “Constant” (C) regions,

defined by degree of sequence similarity between different antibodies

• Repeated structural motif (“immunoglobulin fold”): antiparallel beta strands form 2 beta sheets; intrachain disulfide leads to beta barrel structure

• V-type fold has 9 beta strands, C-type fold has 7• L chain has one V and one C domain; H chain has

one V and 3-4 C domains

• Ag-binding site formed by VH + VL

Page 7: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Structure of Ig Light Chain Showing V- and C-type Immunoglobulin Folds

Page 8: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Variability of V-Region

• Variability isn’t evenly distributed: “hyper-variable” (HV) regions surrounded by less variable “framework” regions (FR)

• Defined by variability plots (number of different a.a./frequency of most common a.a.)

• HV regions correspond to loops between beta strands: B-C, F-G, and C’-C”, and can vary in both sequence and length

• HV regions also called “complementarity determining regions (CDR), because they make up the Ag-binding surface (H + L)

Page 9: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

HV-Hypervariable regionCDR-Complementarity-Determining RegionsFR-Framework region

FR1 FR2 FR3 FR4

Page 10: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

One gene One protein

1012 antigens 1012 genes ???

The Immunological Conundrum:How is Variability Generated?

Page 11: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Generating Diversity: DNA Recombination

• In 1976, Hozumi and Tonegawa showed that Ab-producing cells have different DNA sequence than other somatic cells in Ig locus - evidence for DNA recombination (1987 Nobel Prize)

• Sequencing of Ig genes has identified gene segments that are brought together by recombination

Page 12: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Not in book

Page 13: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 14: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Ig Locus Rearrangement

• Sequence-specific: recombination signal is a conserved heptamer (CACAGTG), a spacer (12 or 23 non-conserved bases), and a conserved nonamer (ACAAAAACC)

• 12/23 Rule: Recombination machinery always joins a gene segment with a 12-bp spacer to another with a 23-bp spacer

• This ensures that the correct gene segments get joined (no V-V, H chain always has D between V and J, etc.)

Page 15: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 16: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 17: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 18: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

V(D)J Recombination Machinery

• Uses both specific (RAG1/2) and ubiquitous factors

• RAG1/2 complex is the sequence-specific recombinase: recognizes recomb signal, brings a 12 and a 23 signal together, and cleaves DNA

• Cleaved DNA is repaired by general DNA repair factors

Page 19: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 20: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

[Estimate]

Page 21: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Heavy – 65 (V); 27 (D); 6 (J) = 10,530 Kappa - 40 (V); 0 ; 5 (J) = 200

320 Lambda - 30 (V) 0 ; 4 (J) = 120

10,530 X 320 = 3 million (about 30 million in human, due to more V segments)

Actually much much much more!

(Junctional diversity, somatic mutations,nucleotide insertions, etc)

Page 22: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Great Diversity Allows for Exquisite Specificity

• Antibodies can distinguish between antigens differing by only small chemical substituents

• Precise part of an antigen recognized by the antibody is called an epitope, or determinant

• Small chemical epitope = hapten

• Linear epitope

• Conformational epitope (generated by folding)

Page 23: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 24: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Fig. 3.8 Antigens can bind in pockets or grooves, or on extended surfaces in the binding sites of antibodies.

Antigenic determinant or epitope: The structure recognized by an antibody

Haptens Continuous Discontinuous oror linear epitope conformational epitopes

Page 25: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

1. Antibodies neutralize bacterial toxins and complete virus particles and bacterial cells.

2. Antibodies coating an antigen render it recognizable as foreign by phagocytes (macrophages and neutrophils), which then ingest and destroy it; this is called opsonization.

3. Antibodies activate of the complement system by coating a bacterial cell.

Fig. 1.24 Antibodies can participate in host defense in three main ways.

Functions of antibodies

Page 26: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Antibody Functions

• Ab’s have two “business” ends: antigen-binding arms and Fc tail.

• Effector function is mediated by Fc region

• Different classes (isotypes) use distinct CH gene segments, and have different effector functions

• Isotype switching occurs by another DNA recombination event (except IgM/IgD, which uses alternative RNA splicing)

Page 27: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Fig. 4.17 The structural organization of the main human immunoglobulin

isotype monomers.

Isotypes of Immunoglobulin

Page 28: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 29: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.
Page 30: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Fig. 4.23 The IgM and IgA molecules can form multimers.

Page 31: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Monoclonal AntibodiesMonoclonal Antibodies

Monoclonal Antibodies - identical antibodies produced in Monoclonal Antibodies - identical antibodies produced in large quantities by an immortalized large quantities by an immortalized hybridomahybridoma cell cell lineline

Technique developed by Köhler and Milstein in 1975, Technique developed by Köhler and Milstein in 1975, earned Nobel Prize in 1984earned Nobel Prize in 1984

Benefits: identical antibodies available in unlimited Benefits: identical antibodies available in unlimited quantity; easily purifiedquantity; easily purified

Drawbacks: may not be useful for all techniques; limited Drawbacks: may not be useful for all techniques; limited number of species (number of species (mousemouse, rat, hamster, rabbit), rat, hamster, rabbit)

Page 32: Antibody-Immunoglobulin Function Structure Antigen-antibody interaction Antibody isotypes Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Chapters 3 & 7.

Production of monoclonal antibodies.

HGPRT-hypoxanthine:guanine phosphoribosyl transferase

PEG-polyethylene glycol

HAT-hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine

Cells lacking HGPRT are sensitive to the HAT medium

Unfused B cells die within 1-2 days without stimulation