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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 DEGRADATION TRANSPORT s ss ss Constans domains konsta ns dom ének effektor funkc iók Effector functions CH2 ss s s CH3 ss s s s BINDING TO CELLS 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 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 Variable Constant GENETIC BACKGROUND OF ANTIBODY DIVERSITY VH VL S–S VH VL S–S Mechanism of the generation of variability? Different rules for encoding the variable and constant regions? 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 – 30 000) V1 C1 Protein V2 C2 Vn Cn MOLECULAR GENETICS OF IMMUNOGLOUBLINS How can the bifunctional nature of antibodies be explained genetically? In 1965, Dreyer & Bennett proposed that for a single isotype of antibody there may be: • 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 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) The experiment of Susumi Tonegawa 1976 * * V-CmRNA probe CmRNA probe * * V C Embryonal cell * * V C B-cell The key experiment of Nobumichi Hozumi and Susumu Tonegawa 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 GENE PROTEIN REARRANGEMENT OF GENE SEGMENTS INTO A SINGLE FUNCTIONAL UNIT (GENE) 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 SOMATIC REARRANGEMENT OF KAPPA (κ) CHAIN GENE SEGMENTS Vκ Jκ B-cell 2 Vκ Vκ 5 Jκ 40 Vκ Vκ Vκ Germ line Jκ Jκ Jκ Jκ During B-lymphocyte development Vκ B-cell 1 DNA Vκ Vκ Jk Jκ Jκ Jκ EXPRESSION OF THE KAPPA CHAIN Vκ P Vκ J pA J E Cκ J E Cκ Vκ-Jκ Leader Vκ J Primary RNA transcript Vκ J Cκ AAAA mRNA Translation Vκ J Cκ Protein Efficiency of somatic gene rearrangement? Further diversity in the Ig heavy chain L VH DH JH CH The heavy chain was found to have further amino acids (0 – 8) between the JH és CH genes D (DIVERSITY) region Each heavy chain requires 2 recombination events JH to DH , VH to JHDH, L VL JL CL Each light chain requires 1 recombination events VL to JL SOMATIC REARRANGMENT OF THE HEAVY CHAIN GENE SEGMENTS 65 VH VH1 VH2 27 D VH3 D D D 6 JH D JH JH JH JH During B-cell development VH1 VH2 VH3 VH1 D D JH JH VH2 D D JH JH IMMUNOGLOBULIN CHAINS ARE ENCODED BY MULTIPLE GENE SEGMENTS ORGANIZATION OF IMMUNOGLOBULIN GENE SEGMENTS Chromosome 2 kappa light chain gene segments Chromosome 22 lambda light chain gene segments Chromosome 14 heavy chain gene segments HOW MANY IMMUNOGLOBULIN GENE SEGMENTS Gene segments Light chain kappa Heavy chain lambda Variable (V) 40 30 65 Diversity (D) 0 0 27 Joining (J) 5 4 6 VARIABILITY OF B-CELL ANTIGEN RECEPTORS AND ANTIBODIES B cells of one individual 2 3 1 4 V-Domains C-Domains VH D JH VL VH-D-JH JL VL-JL Estimates of combinatorial diversity Taking account of functional V D and J genes: 65 VH x 27 DH x 6JH = 10,530 combinations 40 Vk x 5 Jk = 200combinations 30 Vl x 4 Jl = 120 combinations = 320 different light chains If H and L chains pair randomly as H2L2 i.e. 10,530x 320 = 3,369,600 possibilities Due only to COMBINATORIAL diversity In practice, some H + L combinations do not occur as they are unstable Certain V and J genes are also used more frequently than others. There are other mechanisms that add diversity at the junctions between genes - JUNCTIONAL diversity GENERATES A POTENTIAL B-CELL REPERTOIRE Somatic recombination to generate antibody diversity Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) Omenn syndrome - RAG deficiency Lack of T-cells and B cells Early manifestation red rash on the face and shoulders, infections with opportunistic pathogens. (Candida albicans, Pneumocystis carnii pneumonia) Lack of palpable lymph nodes How does somatic gene rearrangement (recombination) work? 1. How is an infinite diversity of specificity generated from finite amounts of DNA? Combinatorial diversity 2. How do V region find J regions and why don’t they join to C regions? 12-23 rule -Special - Recobnitation Signal Sequences (RSS) - Recognized by Recombination Activation Gene coded proteins (RAGs) PALINDROMIC SEQUENCES HEPTAMER NONAMER CACAGTG GTGACAC ACAAAAACC TGTTTTTGG CACAGTG GTGACAC GGTTTTTGT CCAAAAACA V, D, J flanking sequences Sequencing upstream and downstream of V, D and J elements revealed conserved sequences of 7, 23, 9 and 12 nucleotides in an arrangement that depended upon the locus Vl 7 Vk 7 23 12 7 23 9 12 9 7 12 9 9 9 VH 9 D 23 7 12 9 7 Jl 7 Jk 9 23 7 JH Recombination signal sequences (RSS) HEPTAMER - Always contiguous with coding sequence 9 VH 7 23 9 VH 7 12 23 7 D 7 9 9 12 9 9 12 7 D NONAMER - Separated from the heptamer by a 12 or 23 nucleotide spacer 7 JH 23 7 12 9 9 23 7 JH 12-23 RULE – A gene segment flanked by a 23mer RSS can only be linked to a segment flanked by a 12mer RSS Molecular explanation of the 12-23 rule 12-mer = one turn 23-mer = two turns 23 V7 Intervening DNA of any length 9 12 9 7D J Molecular explanation of the 12-23 rule V4 V1 V8 V9 V3 V2 V7 V6 V3 V4 V2 V5 9 9 23-mer • Heptamers and nonamers align back-to-back V6 Loop of intervening DNA is excised DJ V7 V8 V9 V1 7 12-mer 7 • The shape generated by the RSS’s acts as a target for recombinases V5 DJ • An appropriate shape can not be formed if two 23-mer flanked elements attempted to join (i.e. the 12-23 rule) CONSEQUENCES OF RECOMBINATION Generation of P-nucleotides V4 V5 V3 V6 V2 9 9 23-mer 7 V1 7 12-mer DJ V7 V8 V9 Generation of N-nucleotides V4 Terminal deoxynucleotidyl Transferase (TdT) V3 V2 9 9 23-mer 7 7 12-mer V1 V5 DJ V6 Loop of intervening DNA is excised V7 V8 V9 Junctional Diversity V TCGACGTTATAT AGCTGCAATATA D J TTTTT Germline-encoded nucleotides TTTTT Palindromic (P) nucleotides - not in the germline (N) encoded nucleotides - not TTTTT Non-template in the germline Creates an essentially random sequence between the V region, D region and J region in heavy chains and the V region and J region in light chains How does somatic gene rearrangement (recombination) work? 1. How is an infinite diversity of specificity generated from finite amounts of DNA? Combinatorial diversity 2. How do V region find J regions and why don’t they join to C regions? 12-23 rule 3. How does the DNA break and rejoin? Imprecisely, with the random removal and addition of nucleotides to generate sequence diversity Junctional diversity (P- and N- nucleotides, see above)