| Literature DB >> 29382131 |
Alyce Russell1, Eric Adua2, Ivo Ugrina3,4, Simon Laws5,6,7, Wei Wang8,9,10.
Abstract
Multiple factors influence immunoglobulin G glycosylation, which in turn affect the glycoproteins' function on eliciting an anti-inflammatory or pro-inflammatory response. It is prudent to underscore these processes when considering the use of immunoglobulin G N-glycan moieties as an indication of disease presence, progress, or response to therapeutics. It has been demonstrated that the altered expression of genes that encode enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of immunoglobulin G N-glycans, receptors, or complement factors may significantly modify immunoglobulin G effector response, which is important for regulating the immune system. The immunoglobulin G N-glycome is highly heterogenous; however, it is considered an interphenotype of disease (a link between genetic predisposition and environmental exposure) and so has the potential to be used as a dynamic biomarker from the perspective of predictive, preventive, and personalised medicine. Undoubtedly, a deeper understanding of how the multiple factors interact with each other to alter immunoglobulin G glycosylation is crucial. Herein we review the current literature on immunoglobulin G glycoprotein structure, immunoglobulin G Fc glycosylation, associated receptors, and complement factors, the downstream effector functions, and the factors associated with the heterogeneity of immunoglobulin G glycosylation.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; effector function; environmental factors; glycomics; glycosylation; immunoglobulin G
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29382131 PMCID: PMC5855612 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19020390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1IgG and the associated N-glycan structures. Consisting of both heavy chains (‘H’) and light chains (‘L’), the IgG glycoprotein has two domains that infer different properties; the fragment antigen-binding (Fab) and fragment crystallisable (Fc) domains. The Fab and Fc are connected by a hinge region containing disulphide bonds, which differ depending on the IgG subclass. The Fab domain is responsible for recognising and binding antigen. The Fc domain contains two glycans attached to conserved regions of the CH2. The Fc domain elicits effector functions by binding Fc receptors (FcRs) on natural killer and other inflammatory cells. Changes to the attached glycan moieties, simplified as the three glycan structural types in the side figure, can significantly alter effector functions of the IgG glycoprotein. GlcNAc—N-acetylglucosamine. Gal—galactose, Fuc—core fucose, Man—mannose, Neu5Ac—N-acetylneuraminic acid (sialic acid).
Figure 2Biosynthesis of the IgG glycoprotein. ① N-glycan biosynthesis begins on the endoplasmic reticulum membrane where two N-acetylglucosamines (UDP-GlcNAc) and five mannose (GDP-Man) sugar nucleotides contribute the given monosacchairdes to a dolichol-phosphate (Dolichol-P) donor molecule on the cytoplasmic side. ② The whole Dolichol-P attached N-glycan is flipped so it is on the luminal side of the endoplasmic reticulum. ③ Dolichol-P flips individual sugar nucleotides from the cytoplasm to the lumen. ④ In tandem, the ribosomes biosynthesise the polypeptide structure of the IgG. ⑤ Oligosaccharyltransferase transfers the N-glycan moiety from Dolichol-P to asparagine (Asn) 297 on the growing polypeptide. ⑥ The three terminal N-acetylglucosamine sugar nucleotides are removed over two steps, following folding and assembly of the nascent IgG, and this signals the transfer of the IgG from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus. ⑦,⑧ The IgG components move through the Golgi apparatus, where different glycosyltransferases and glycosylhydrolases add and remove respectively, different sugar nucleotides to the glycan moiety. ⑨ Following excretion from the trans Golgi, the final IgG glycoprotein either secreted from the B-cell lymphocyte or attached to the plasma membrane of the B-cell to become a B-cell receptor (BCR).
Figure 3A picture summary of altered IgG glycosylation and its downstream effects. GlcNAc—N-acetylglucosamine. Gal—galactose, Fuc—core fucose, Man—mannose, Neu5Ac—N-acetylneuraminic acid (sialic acid), ADCC—antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity, CDC—complement-dependent cytotoxicity.
Summary of fragment crystallisable receptors (FcRs) ligated by IgG. Regulation: either up- or down-regulation of the expression of the FcR on a given cell. Produces: the cytokines released following binding with the given FcR. Effects: summary points from the literature.
| Receptor | Classification | IgG Affinity | Cell Types | Regulation | Produces | Effects | Ref (1st Author) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FcγRI (CD64) | Type I Activating | High for IgG1, 3, 4 | Mast cells, Monocytes, Macrophages, Neutrophils, Dendritic Cells | ↑ IL-10, INF-γ; | IL-6 | ↑ B Cell Differentiation, Immunoglobulin Production, Acute-Phase Protein Synthesis; | Akira (1990) [ |
| FcγRIIa1/2 (CD32a) | Type I Activating | Low | Mast Cells, Monocytes, Macrophages, Neutrophils, Dendritic Cells, Eosinophils, Basophils, Platelets | ↓ IL-4 | TNF-α | ↑ ADCC, Degranulation, Phagocytosis (depends on expressing cell)—through SRC-family kinase phosphorylation | Daëron (1997) [ |
| FcγRIIb1/2/3 (CD32b) | Type I Inhibitory | Low | T Cells, NK Cells, Immature B Cells (only FcR) | ↑ IL-4 | ↓ BCR-Induced Ca2+ Mobilisation, Cell Proliferation, ITAM-Regulated FcRs, Akt; Limits Autoantibody Production (on B Cells) | Karsten (2012) [ | |
| FcγRIIc (CD32c) | Type I Activating | Low | Monocytes, Neutrophils, NK Cells | ↓ IL-4 | TNF-α | ↑ ADCC, Degranulation, Phagocytosis (depends on expressing cell)—through SRC-family kinase phosphorylation | Daëron (1997) [ |
| FcγRIIIa (CD16a) | Type I Activating | Medium | NK Cells, Macrophages, Monocytes (10%) | ↓ IL-4 | TNF-α | ↑ ADCC | Daëron (1997) [ |
| FcγRIIIb (CD16b) | Type I Activating | Low | T Cells, Neutrophils, Macrophages, Monocytes | ↑ INF-γ | ↑ Ca2+ Mobilisation | Fernandes (2005) [ | |
| FcεRII (CD23) | Type II Inhibitory | ? | B Cells, T Cells, Monocytes, Follicular Dendritic Cells, Macrophages | ↑ Production FcγRIIb—Inhibits further activating FcγR binding | Pincetic (2014) [ | ||
| DC-SIGN (CD209) | Type II Inhibitory | ? | B Cells, Monocytes, Dendritic Cells, Macrophages | ↑ IL-4, IL-33 | IL-4 | ↑ Production FcγRIIb—Inhibits further activating FcγR binding | Pincetic (2014) [ |
?, unknown; ↑, increased affinity/regulation/effect; ↓, decreased affinity/regulation/effect; Fuc: Core fucose; Gal: terminating galactose; Neu5Ac: terminating sialic acid; ADCC: antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity; BCR: B-cell receptor.
Summary of FcR effector responses elicited by IgG binding. IgG N-glycosylation of the Fc domain is directly linked to changes in affinity for FcRs that either produce more pro-inflammatory responses (ADCC) or anti-inflammatory responses (immune modulation). Anti-inflammatory activity is said to be dominant.
| Effector Response | Immune Cells | Inflammation | Relation to IgG | Ref (1st Author) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | Both | Altered IgG glycosylation may be linked to changes in cytokine expression | Lin (1995) [ | |
| Mast Cells, Basophils, Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Cytotoxic T Cells, NK Cells | Pro | ↑ Fcγ-RI binding = | Woolhiser (2001) [ | |
| Mast Cells, Basophils, Neutrophils, Eosinophils, Macrophages | Pro | ↑ Fc binding can lead to | Quast (2014) [ | |
| NK Cells, Macrophages, Monocytes, Neutrophils, Eosinophils | Pro | ↓ core fucosylated/sialylated IgG | Nimmerjahn (2005) [ | |
| All | Anti | ↑ sialylated IgG | Pincetic (2014) [ |
=, “leads to” or equal to; ↑, increased; ↓, decreased.