Inter-and intraclonal diversity in the antibody response to influenza hemagglutinin.

SH Clarke, K Huppi, D Ruezinsky, L Staudt… - The Journal of …, 1985 - rupress.org
SH Clarke, K Huppi, D Ruezinsky, L Staudt, W Gerhard, M Weigert
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1985rupress.org
This study focuses on 10 BALB/c anti-influenza virus (A/PR/8/34) hemagglutinin antibodies
that have light chains encoded by the same variable region kappa chain (V kappa) gene, V
kappa 21C. A comparison of antibodies from lymphocytes of independent origin reveals the
contribution of germline diversity (combinatorial joining and association) to this response.
Although combinatorial joining and association contribute to sequence diversity, they
appear to have little effect on the fine specificity of these antibodies. Somatic mutation, in …
This study focuses on 10 BALB/c anti-influenza virus (A/PR/8/34) hemagglutinin antibodies that have light chains encoded by the same variable region kappa chain (V kappa) gene, V kappa 21C. A comparison of antibodies from lymphocytes of independent origin reveals the contribution of germline diversity (combinatorial joining and association) to this response. Although combinatorial joining and association contribute to sequence diversity, they appear to have little effect on the fine specificity of these antibodies. Somatic mutation, in addition to contributing to the sequence diversity of these antibodies, creates differences in their fine specificity. The extent of mutation and its effect on fine specificity can be seen by comparing antibodies of lymphocytes from the same clone. These intraclonal comparisons also indicate that somatic mutation is an ongoing process occurring at a high rate (estimated to be at least 10(-3) mutations per base pair per division) in the expressed V region heavy chain (VH) and V kappa genes. Furthermore, both the nature and distribution of these mutations suggest that amino acid replacement mutations in the light but not the heavy chain are selected for by antigen.
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