| Literature DB >> 29867943 |
Gina-Maria Lilienthal1, Johann Rahmöller1,2, Janina Petry1, Yannic C Bartsch1, Alexei Leliavski1, Marc Ehlers1,3.
Abstract
IgG antibodies (Abs) mediate their effector functions through the interaction with Fcγ receptors (FcγRs) and the complement factors. The main IgG-mediated complement activation pathway is induced through the binding of complement C1q to IgG Abs. This interaction is dependent on antigen-dependent hexamer formation of human IgG1 and IgG3 to increase the affinity for the six-headed C1q molecule. By contrast, human IgG4 fails to bind to C1q. Instead, it has been suggested that human IgG4 can block IgG1 and IgG3 hexamerization required for their binding to C1q and activating the complement. Here, we show that murine IgG1, which functionally resembles human IgG4 by not interacting with C1q, inhibits the binding of IgG2a, IgG2b, and IgG3 to C1q in vitro, and suppresses IgG2a-mediated complement activation in a hemolytic assay in an antigen-dependent and IgG subclass-specific manner. From this perspective, we discuss the potential of murine IgG1 and human IgG4 to block the complement activation as well as suppressive effects of sialylated IgG subclass Abs on FcγR-mediated immune cell activation. Accumulating evidence suggests that both mechanisms seem to be responsible for preventing uncontrolled IgG (auto)Ab-induced inflammation in mice and humans. Distinct IgG subclass distributions and functionally opposite IgG Fc glycosylation patterns might explain different outcomes of IgG-mediated immune responses and provide new therapeutic options through the induction, enrichment, or application of antigen-specific sialylated human IgG4 to prevent complement and FcγR activation as well.Entities:
Keywords: C1q; IgG; IgG glycosylation; IgG hexamer; IgG4; complement; immunosuppression; murine IgG1
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29867943 PMCID: PMC5954034 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Murine IgG1 prevents C1q binding and complement activation by IgG2a, IgG2b, or IgG3 antibodies (Abs) in an antigen-specific manner. (A) Schematic description of the C1q ELISA applied in panels (B,C) and Figure S1 in Supplementary Material. 2,4,6-Trinitrophenyl (TNP)-Ficoll-coupled 96-well plates were incubated with different concentrations of one or two anti-TNP monoclonal IgG subclass Abs [anti-TNP IgG1 (clone H5; red), IgG3 (clone 9A6; gray) as well as IgG1 (orange), IgG2a (blue), and IgG2b (green) class-switch variants (sv; with identical VDJ sequences)] and subsequently with C1q-containing serum; C1q was detected with an anti-C1q-HRP-coupled secondary Ab system. (B,C) Mean of the resulting C1q ELISA values measured at 450 nm (OD450) with the indicated (μg/ml) single or paired anti-TNP IgG subclass Abs (n = 2). IgG subclass-specific half-maximal effective concentrations (EC50; ×) were calculated by the interpolated subclass-specific C1q-binding curves in panel (C) (R2 > 0.99). (D) Schematic description of the applied red blood cell (RBC)-lysis assay. TNP-coupled RBCs (Figure S1E in Supplementary Material) were incubated with one or two anti-TNP monoclonal IgG subclass Abs or an anti-ovalbumin IgG1 (clone 4C9) Ab and subsequently treated with serum containing C1q and further complement components. (E) Exemplary hemolysis approach with centrifuged TNP-coupled RBCs after reaction with serum, serum plus anti-TNP IgG2a or H2O as a positive control (100% lysis). (F,G) Mean of the resulting RBC lysis [measured hemoglobin (OD 414 nm) in the supernatant of centrifuged RBCs], which was calculated as the percentage of H2O-induced positive control RBC lysis (100%; maximum of the y-axes) with the indicated (μg/ml) single or paired IgG subclass Abs (n = 2). The results from one of at least two independent experiments are presented.
Figure 2Inhibitory potential of (sialylated) murine IgG1 and human IgG4. (A–C) Summary of our perspective about the inhibitory and therapeutic potential of (sialylated) murine IgG1 and human IgG4 (see text for details). IgG antibodies have one conserved N-glycosylation site at Asn 297 in each of their constant heavy chain regions. The biantennary core glycan structure that consists of four N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and three mannose residues can be further decorated with fucose, a bisecting GlcNAc and terminal galactose or galactose and sialic acid. (D) Average distribution of total human and mouse serum IgG Fc glycosylation patterns coupled to Asn 297 of total human serum IgG (IVIg; pooled intravenous immunoglobulin from healthy donors) and total murine serum IgG from 8- to 10-week-old untreated female C57BL/6 wild-type mice were analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography [data from Epp et al. (19)].