| Literature DB >> 35867757 |
David B Langley1, Peter Schofield1, Damien Nevoltris1, Jennifer Jackson1, Katherine J L Jackson1, Tim J Peters1, Melanie Burk2, Jacqueline M Matthews3, Antony Basten1,4, Christopher C Goodnow1,5,6, Sheryl van Nunen2,7, Joanne H Reed1,4, Daniel Christ1,4.
Abstract
Humans lack the capacity to produce the Galα1-3Galβ1-4GlcNAc (α-gal) glycan, and produce anti-α-gal antibodies upon exposure to the carbohydrate on a diverse set of immunogens, including commensal gut bacteria, malaria parasites, cetuximab, and tick proteins. Here we use X-ray crystallographic analysis of antibodies from α-gal knockout mice and humans in complex with the glycan to reveal a common binding motif, centered on a germline-encoded tryptophan residue at Kabat position 33 (W33) of the complementarity-determining region of the variable heavy chain (CDRH1). Immunoglobulin sequencing of anti-α-gal B cells in healthy humans and tick-induced mammalian meat anaphylaxis patients revealed preferential use of heavy chain germline IGHV3-7, encoding W33, among an otherwise highly polyclonal antibody response. Antigen binding was critically dependent on the presence of the germline-encoded W33 residue for all of the analyzed antibodies; moreover, introduction of the W33 motif into naive IGHV3-23 antibody phage libraries enabled the rapid selection of α-gal binders. Our results outline structural and genetic factors that shape the human anti-α-galactosyl antibody response, and provide a framework for future therapeutics development.Entities:
Keywords: alpha-galactose; antibody; germline restriction; mammalian meat allergy
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35867757 PMCID: PMC9282431 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2123212119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779