Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference

Summary: Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) recognize conserved features of rapidly mutating pathogens and confer universal protection, but they emerge rarely in natural infection. Increasing evidence indicates that seemingly passive antibodies may interfere with natural selection of B cells. Y...

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Main Authors: Le Yan, Shenshen Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:iScience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004220307604
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spelling doaj-240b7e8543bc419b98da17b75fe9696a2020-11-25T03:36:27ZengElsevieriScience2589-00422020-10-012310101568Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody InterferenceLe Yan0Shenshen Wang1Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, 499 Illinois Street, San Francisco, CA 94158, USADepartment of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA; Corresponding authorSummary: Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) recognize conserved features of rapidly mutating pathogens and confer universal protection, but they emerge rarely in natural infection. Increasing evidence indicates that seemingly passive antibodies may interfere with natural selection of B cells. Yet, how such interference modulates polyclonal responses is unknown. Here we provide a framework for understanding the role of antibody interference—mediated by multi-epitope antigens—in shaping B cell clonal makeup and the fate of bnAb lineages. We find that, under heterogeneous interference, clones with different intrinsic fitness can collectively persist. Furthermore, antagonism among fit clones (specific for variable epitopes) promotes expansion of unfit clones (targeting conserved epitopes), at the cost of repertoire potency. This trade-off, however, can be alleviated by synergy toward the unfit. Our results provide a physical basis for antigen-mediated clonal interactions, stress system-level impacts of molecular synergy and antagonism, and offer principles to amplify naturally rare clones.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004220307604Biological SciencesImmunologyMathematical Biosciences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Le Yan
Shenshen Wang
spellingShingle Le Yan
Shenshen Wang
Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
iScience
Biological Sciences
Immunology
Mathematical Biosciences
author_facet Le Yan
Shenshen Wang
author_sort Le Yan
title Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
title_short Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
title_full Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
title_fullStr Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
title_full_unstemmed Shaping Polyclonal Responses via Antigen-Mediated Antibody Interference
title_sort shaping polyclonal responses via antigen-mediated antibody interference
publisher Elsevier
series iScience
issn 2589-0042
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Summary: Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) recognize conserved features of rapidly mutating pathogens and confer universal protection, but they emerge rarely in natural infection. Increasing evidence indicates that seemingly passive antibodies may interfere with natural selection of B cells. Yet, how such interference modulates polyclonal responses is unknown. Here we provide a framework for understanding the role of antibody interference—mediated by multi-epitope antigens—in shaping B cell clonal makeup and the fate of bnAb lineages. We find that, under heterogeneous interference, clones with different intrinsic fitness can collectively persist. Furthermore, antagonism among fit clones (specific for variable epitopes) promotes expansion of unfit clones (targeting conserved epitopes), at the cost of repertoire potency. This trade-off, however, can be alleviated by synergy toward the unfit. Our results provide a physical basis for antigen-mediated clonal interactions, stress system-level impacts of molecular synergy and antagonism, and offer principles to amplify naturally rare clones.
topic Biological Sciences
Immunology
Mathematical Biosciences
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004220307604
work_keys_str_mv AT leyan shapingpolyclonalresponsesviaantigenmediatedantibodyinterference
AT shenshenwang shapingpolyclonalresponsesviaantigenmediatedantibodyinterference
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