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ANTIBODY DIVERSITY STRUCTURE OF IMMUNOGLOBULINS/ANTIBODIES Heavy chain (H) VH VL CH Light chain (L) CL Antigen Antigen binding antigénkötés s VL s s s s s s ss ss Constans konstadomains ns dom ének CH2 ss s s CH3 ss s s BINDING TO CELLS DEGRADATION TRANSPORT effektor funkc iók Effector functions s s s CL s COMPLEMENT ACTIVATION s CH1 s va riábilis d om ének Variable domains s s S s S s s s s VH How can antibody spcificity and diversity be explained? Paul Ehrlich: side chain theory (1897) There are receptors for nutrients. There may be receptors (side chains) for foreign entities. BUT: the diversity is huge, hard to explain at that time What about pre-existing antibodies? Antibody is not produced by the host Information of the large antibody repertoire comes from the antigen itself. Direct: antibody comes from the antigen… BUT antibody level does not decline together with that of the antigen!! Instruction Theories: Antigen is produced by the host but the antigen teaches antibody to fold properly or it is synthesized on the antigen Problem: antibody is also produced by the descendents of the activated B cells 1950: Protein is created on nucleic acid template, but the paradox of coding for such diversity remained a mystery AMINO ACID SEQUENCE OF IMMUNOGLOBULINS Multiple myeloma (MM) Plasma cell tumors – tumor cells reside in the bone marrow Produce immunoglobulins of monoclonal origin, serum concentration 50-100mg/ml Rodney Porter & Gerald Edelman 1959 – 1960 myeloma protein purification Gel electrophoresis L H Reduction 50 kDa Heavy chain 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 25 kDa Light chain Variábilis Constans MOLECULAR GENETICS OF IMMUNOGLOUBLINS GERMLINE VARIATION OR SOMATIC MUTATION? How can the diversity of antibodies be explained genetically? In 1965, William Dreyer & Claude Bennett proposed that : • A single C region gene encoded in the GERMLINE and separate from the V region genes • Multiple choices of V region genes available • A mechanism to rearrange V and C genes in the genome so that they can fuse to form a complete Immunoglobulin gene. This was genetic heresy as it violated the then accepted notion that DNA was identical in every cell of an individual DOGMA OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY CHARACTERISTICS OF IMMUNOGLOBULIN SEQUENCE 1 GEN = 1 PROTEIN THEORIES 1 GEN Gen High rate of somatic mutations in the V-region V C Many GENES (10 000 – 100 000) V1 C Protein V2 C Vn C Proof of the Dreyer - Bennett hypothesis V V V V V V V V V V V V C V V A single C region gene is encoded in the germline and separated from the multiple V region genes C A mechanism to rearrange V and C genes in the genome exists so that they can fuse to form a complete Immunoglobulin gene Find a way to show the existence of multiple V genes and rearrangement to the C gene Approach V V V V V V V V V V V V C V Germline DNA C Rearranged DNA V Tools: • A set of cDNA probes to specifically distinguish V regions from C regions • DNA restriction enzymes to fragment DNA • Examples of germline (e.g. placenta) and mature B cell DNA (e.g. a plasmacytoma/myeloma) Experiment of Susumu Tonegawa 1976 Basel DNA-extraction Digestion by restriction enzyme Gel electrophoresis Southern blot Kb C probe V C probe V Liver cell 6,0 4,0 1,5 V C V-probe 6,0 4,0 1,5 C-probe VC 6.0 Kb 4.0 Kb V C 1.5. Kb V C B-cell B-cell CONCLUSION V and C genes get close to each other in B-cells only V V V C B-CELL There are many variable genes but only one constant gene V V V V C GERM LINE Ig gene sequencing complicated the model The structures of germline VL genes were similar for Vk, and Vl, However there was an anomaly between germline and rearranged DNA: VL CL ~ 95aa ~ 100aa L LV L CL ~ 208aa Where do the extra 13 amino acids come from? LV L ~ 95aa JL CL ~ 100aa Some of the extra amino acids are provided by one of a small set of J or JOINING regions