B cells expressing IgM B cell receptors of HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies discriminate antigen affinities by sensing binding association rates

HIV-1 envelope (Env) proteins designed to induce neutralizing antibody responses allow study of the role of affinities (equilibrium dissociation constant [K ]) and kinetic rates (association/dissociation rates) on B cell antigen recognition. It is unclear whether affinity discrimination during B cel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell reports (Cambridge) 2022-06, Vol.39 (13), p.111021-111021, Article 111021
Hauptverfasser: Hossain, Md Alamgir, Anasti, Kara, Watts, Brian, Cronin, Kenneth, Derking, Ronald, Groschel, Bettina, Kane, Advaiti Pai, Edwards, R J, Easterhoff, David, Zhang, Jinsong, Rountree, Wes, Ortiz, Yaneth, Saunders, Kevin, Schief, William R, Sanders, Rogier W, Verkoczy, Laurent, Reth, Michael, Alam, S Munir
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:HIV-1 envelope (Env) proteins designed to induce neutralizing antibody responses allow study of the role of affinities (equilibrium dissociation constant [K ]) and kinetic rates (association/dissociation rates) on B cell antigen recognition. It is unclear whether affinity discrimination during B cell activation is based solely on Env protein binding K and whether B cells discriminate among proteins of similar affinities that bind with different kinetic rates. Here, we use a panel of Env proteins and Ramos B cell lines expressing immunoglobulin M (IgM) B cell receptors (BCRs) with specificity for CD4-binding-site broadly neutralizing antibodies to study the role of antigen binding kinetic rates on both early (proximal/distal signaling) and late events (BCR/antigen internalization) in B cell activation. Our results support a kinetic model for B cell activation in which Env protein affinity discrimination is based not on overall K but on sensing of association rate and a threshold antigen-BCR half-life.
ISSN:2211-1247
2211-1247
DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111021