| Literature DB >> 31204101 |
David R Martinez1, Youyi Fong2, Shuk Hang Li3, Fang Yang4, Madeleine F Jennewein5, Joshua A Weiner6, Erin A Harrell4, Jesse F Mangold3, Ria Goswami3, George R Seage7, Galit Alter5, Margaret E Ackerman6, Xinxia Peng8, Genevieve G Fouda9, Sallie R Permar10.
Abstract
The placental transfer of maternal IgG is critical for infant protection against infectious pathogens. However, factors that modulate the placental transfer of IgG remain largely undefined. HIV-infected women have impaired placental IgG transfer, presenting a unique "disruption model" to define factors that modulate placental IgG transfer. We measured the placental transfer efficiency of maternal HIV and pathogen-specific IgG in US and Malawian HIV-infected mothers and their HIV-exposed uninfected and infected infants. We examined the role of maternal HIV disease progression, infant factors, placental Fc receptor expression, IgG subclass, and glycan signatures and their association with placental IgG transfer efficiency. Maternal IgG characteristics, such as binding to placentally expressed Fc receptors FcγRIIa and FcγRIIIa, and Fc region glycan profiles were associated with placental IgG transfer efficiency. Our findings suggest that Fc region characteristics modulate the selective placental transfer of IgG, with implications for maternal vaccine design and infant health.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; IgG Fc region; antibodies; infant protection; maternal immunity; placental IgG transfer
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31204101 PMCID: PMC6727200 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.05.046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582