| Literature DB >> 3141511 |
Abstract
The role that somatic mutations play in the phosphocholine-specific, antibody response to Streptococcus pneumoniae was examined by studying sets of hybridomas from different individual mice. As expected most of the cell lines were from the T15 anti-phosphocholine family and were not encoded by the v1 gene of the T15 VH family and V kappa 22. A minority of antibodies were from the M603 (v1/V kappa 8) and M511 (v1/V kappa 24) families. Three additional antibodies were encoded by the v11 gene of the T15 family; two were paired with a V lambda and the other with a V kappa 1 gene. In vitro binding studies showed that T15- and M603-like antibodies had the highest affinity for S. pneumoniae. Complete sequencing of the VH and VL mRNA from 25 of the hybridomas revealed somatic mutations in 11 of the antibodies. A total of 17 independently derived T15 positive cell lines were studied in detail, six of these were mutated. These mutations were scattered throughout the V regions and the replacement to silent ratio was typical of that for framework regions. Statistical evaluation of the placement of mutations showed that there was a slight but significantly decreased frequency of mutations in complementarity determining regions. Comparisons of mutated and unmutated T15-related antibodies showed that mutations caused a decrease in binding to S. pneumoniae in every case. These results argue that the optimal specificity for this molecular form of phosphocholine is encoded in the germline and that Ag-driven events favor selection of B cells expressing these germ-line encoded antibodies.Entities:
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Year: 1988 PMID: 3141511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422