Antibody
Antibody
Each antibody binds to a specific antigen;
an interaction similar to a lock and key.
An antibody (Ab),
also known as an immunoglobulin (Ig), is a large,
Y-shaped protein produced
mainly by plasma cells that
are used by the immune system to
identify and neutralize pathogens such
as bacteria and viruses.
The antibody recognizes a unique molecule of the harmful agent,
called an antigen,
via the Fab's
variable region. Each tip of the "Y" of an antibody
contains a paratope (analogous to a lock) that is specific for one
particular epitope (similarly
analogous to a key) on an antigen, allowing these two structures to bind
together with precision. Using this binding mechanism, an antibody can tag a microbe or
an infected cell for attack by other parts of the immune system, or can
neutralize its target directly (for example, by blocking a part of a microbe
that is essential for its invasion and survival). Depending on the antigen, the
binding may impede the biological process causing the disease or may activate
macrophages to destroy the foreign substance. The ability of an antibody to
communicate with the other components of the immune system is mediated via
its Fc
region (located at the base of the "Y"), which
contains a conserved glycosylation site
involved in these interactions. The production of antibodies is the main
function of the humoral
immune system.
Antibodies
are secreted by B cells of
the adaptive immune system, mostly by differentiated B cells called plasma cells.
Antibodies can occur in two physical forms, a soluble form that is secreted
from the cell to be free in the blood plasma,
and a membrane-bound
form that is attached to the surface of a B cell and is referred to as
the B-cell receptor (BCR).
The BCR is found only on the surface of B cells and facilitates the activation
of these cells and their subsequent differentiation into either antibody
factories called plasma cells or memory B cells that
will survive in the body and remember that same antigen so the B cells can
respond faster upon future exposure. In most cases, the interaction of the B
cell with a T helper cell is
necessary to produce full activation of the B cell and, therefore, antibody
generation following antigen binding. Soluble antibodies are released into
the blood and
tissue fluids, as well as many secretions to
continue to survey for invading microorganisms.
Antibodies
are glycoproteins belonging
to the immunoglobulin
superfamily. They constitute most of
the gamma globulin fraction
of the blood proteins.
They are typically made of basic structural units—each with two large heavy
chains and two small light
chains. There are several different types of antibody heavy
chains that define the five different types of crystallizable fragments (Fc)
that may be attached to the antigen-binding fragments. The five different types
of Fc regions allow antibodies to be grouped into five isotypes.
Each Fc region of a particular antibody isotype is able to bind to its specific
Fc Receptor (except for IgD, which is essentially the BCR), thus allowing the
antigen-antibody complex to mediate different roles depending on which FcR it
binds. The ability of an antibody to bind to its corresponding FcR is further
modulated by the structure of the glycan(s) present at conserved sites within
its Fc region. The ability of antibodies to bind to FcRs helps to direct
the appropriate immune response for each different type of foreign object they
encounter. For example, IgE is
responsible for an allergic response
consisting of mast cell degranulation
and histamine release.
IgE's Fab paratope
binds to allergic antigen,
for example house dust mite particles,
while its Fc region binds to Fc receptor ε. The allergen-IgE-FcRε interaction
mediates allergic signal transduction to induce conditions such as asthma.
Though
the general structure of all antibodies is very similar, a small region at the
tip of the protein is extremely variable, allowing millions of antibodies with
slightly different tip structures, or antigen-binding sites, to exist. This
region is known as the hypervariable region. Each of these variants
can bind to a different antigen. This enormous diversity of antibody
paratopes on the antigen-binding fragments allows the immune system to
recognize an equally wide variety of antigens. The large and diverse
population of antibody paratope is generated by random recombination events of
a set of gene segments
that encode different antigen-binding sites (or paratopes),
followed by random mutations in
this area of the antibody gene, which create further diversity. This
recombinational process that produces clonal antibody paratope diversity is
called V(D)J or VJ recombination. Basically, the antibody paratope is
polygenic, made up of three genes, V, D, and J. Each paratope locus is also
polymorphic, such that during antibody production, one allele of V, one of D, and
one of J is chosen. These gene segments are then joined together using random
genetic recombination to produce the paratope. The regions where the genes are
randomly recombined together is the hyper variable region used to recognise
different antigens on a clonal basis.
Antibody
genes also re-organize in a process called class
switching that changes the one type
of heavy chain Fc fragment to another, creating a different isotype of the
antibody that retains the antigen-specific variable region. This allows a
single antibody to be used by different types of Fc receptors, expressed on
different parts of the immune system.
Forms
The
membrane-bound form of an antibody may be called a surface
immunoglobulin (sIg) or a membrane immunoglobulin (mIg).
It is part of the B cell receptor (BCR), which allows a B cell
to detect when a specific antigen is present in the body and triggers B cell
activation. The BCR is composed of surface-bound IgD or IgM antibodies and
associated Ig-α and Ig-β heterodimers,
which are capable of signal transduction. A
typical human B cell will have 50,000 to 100,000 antibodies bound to its
surface. Upon antigen binding, they cluster in large patches, which can
exceed 1 micrometer in diameter, on lipid rafts that isolate the BCRs from most
other cell signaling receptors. These patches may improve the efficiency
of the cellular
immune response. In humans,
the cell surface is bare around the B cell receptors for several hundred
nanometers, which further isolates the BCRs from competing influences.
Antibody–antigen
interactions
The
antibody's paratope interacts with the antigen's epitope. An antigen usually
contains different epitopes along its surface arranged discontinuously, and
dominant epitopes on a given antigen are called determinants.
Antibody
and antigen interact by spatial complementarity (lock and key). The molecular
forces involved in the Fab-epitope interaction are weak and non-specific – for
example electrostatic forces, hydrogen bonds, hydrophobic
interactions, and van der Waals forces.
This means binding between antibody and antigen is reversible, and the
antibody's affinity towards
an antigen is relative rather than absolute. Relatively weak binding also means
it is possible for an antibody to cross-react with different antigens of
different relative affinities.
Often,
once an antibody and antigen bind, they become an immune complex,
which functions as a unitary object and can act as an antigen in its own right,
being countered by other antibodies. Similarly, haptens are small
molecules that provoke no immune response by themselves, but once they bind to
proteins, the resulting complex or hapten-carrier adduct is
antigenic.
Isotypes
Antibodies
can come in different varieties known as isotypes or
classes. In placental mammals
there are five antibody isotypes known as IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM. They are
each named with an "Ig" prefix that stands for immunoglobulin, a name
sometimes used interchangeably with antibody, and differ in their biological
properties, functional locations and ability to deal with different antigens,
as depicted in the table. The different suffixes of the antibody isotypes
denote the different types of heavy chains the antibody contains, with each
heavy chain class named alphabetically: α (alpha), γ (gamma), δ (delta), ε
(epsilon), and μ (mu). This gives rise to IgA, IgG, IgD, IgE, and IgM,
respectively.
The
antibody isotype of a B cell changes
during cell development and
activation. Immature B cells, which have never been exposed to an antigen,
express only the IgM isotype in a cell surface bound form. The B lymphocyte, in
this ready-to-respond form, is known as a "naive B lymphocyte." The
naive B lymphocyte expresses both surface IgM and IgD. The co-expression of
both of these immunoglobulin isotypes renders the B cell ready to respond to
antigen.[17] B
cell activation follows engagement of the cell-bound antibody molecule with an
antigen, causing the cell to divide and differentiate into
an antibody-producing cell called a plasma cell.
In this activated form, the B cell starts to produce antibody in asecreted form
rather than a membrane-bound
form. Some daughter cells of
the activated B cells undergo isotype switching, a
mechanism that causes the production of antibodies to change from IgM or IgD to
the other antibody isotypes, IgE, IgA, or IgG, that have defined roles in the
immune system.
Structure
Antibodies
are heavy (~150 kDa) globular plasma proteins.
They have sugar chains (glycans) added to conserved amino acid residues. In
other words, antibodies areglycoproteins. The
attached glycans are critically important to the structure and function of the
antibody. Among other things the expressed glycans can modulate an antibody's
affinity for its corresponding FcR(s).
The
basic functional unit of each antibody is an immunoglobulin (Ig) monomer (containing
only one Ig unit); secreted antibodies can also be dimeric with two
Ig units as with IgA,tetrameric with
four Ig units like teleost fish IgM,
or pentameric with
five Ig units, like mammalian IgM.
Several immunoglobulin domains make up the two heavy
chains (red and blue) and the two light chains (green and yellow) of an
antibody. The immunoglobulin domains are composed of between 7 (for constant
domains) and 9 (for variable domains)β-strands.
The
variable parts of an antibody are its V regions, and the constant part is its C
region.
Immunoglobulin domains
The
Ig monomer is a "Y"-shaped molecule that consists of four polypeptide chains;
two identical heavy chains and two identical light
chainsconnected by disulfide bonds. Each
chain is composed of structural domains called immunoglobulin
domains. These domains contain about
70–110 amino acids and
are classified into different categories (for example, variable or IgV, and
constant or IgC) according to their size and function. They have a
characteristic immunoglobulin fold in
which two beta sheets create
a "sandwich" shape, held together by interactions between
conserved cysteines and
other charged amino acids.
Heavy chain
For more details on this topic,
see Immunoglobulin
heavy chain.
There
are five types of mammalian Ig heavy
chain denoted by the Greek letters: α, δ, ε, γ,
and μ. The
type of heavy chain present defines the class of antibody;
these chains are found in IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM antibodies, respectively. Distinct
heavy chains differ in size and composition; α and γ contain approximately 450
amino acids, whereas μ and ε have approximately 550 amino acids.
1. Fab
region
2. Fc
region
3. Heavy
chain (blue) with one variable (VH) domain followed by a
constant domain (CH1), a hinge region, and two more constant (CH2 and CH3)
domains
4. Light
chain (green) with one variable (VL) and one constant (CL)
domain
5. Antigen
binding site (paratope)
6.
Hinge regions
Each
heavy chain has two regions, the constant region and the variable
region. The constant region is identical in all antibodies of the same
isotype, but differs in antibodies of different isotypes. Heavy chains γ, α and
δ have a constant region composed of three tandem (in a line)
Ig domains,
and a hinge region for added flexibility; heavy chains μ and ε have a
constant region composed of fourimmunoglobulin domains. The
variable region of the heavy chain differs in antibodies produced by different
B cells, but is the same for all antibodies produced by a single B cell
or B
cell clone. The variable region of each
heavy chain is approximately 110 amino acids long and is composed of a single
Ig domain.
Light chain
For more details on this topic,
see Immunoglobulin
light chain.
In
mammals there are two types of immunoglobulin
light chain, which are called lambda (λ)
and kappa (κ). A
light chain has two successive domains: one constant domain and one variable
domain. The approximate length of a light chain is 211 to 217 amino acids. Each
antibody contains two light chains that are always identical; only one type of
light chain, κ or λ, is present per antibody in mammals. Other types of light
chains, such as the iota (ι)
chain, are found in other vertebrates like
sharks (Chondrichthyes)
and bony fishes (Teleostei).
CDRs, Fv, Fab and Fc regions
Some
parts of an antibody have the same functions. The arms of the Y, for example, contain
the sites that can bind to antigens (in general, identical) and, therefore,
recognize specific foreign objects. This region of the antibody is called
the Fab (fragment, antigen-binding)
region. It is composed of one constant
and one variable domain from each heavy and light chain of the antibody. The paratope is shaped
at the amino terminal end of
the antibody monomer by
the variable domains from the heavy and light chains. The variable domain is
also referred to as the FV region and is the most important region for
binding to antigens. To be specific, variable loops of β-strands, three each on
the light (VL) and heavy (VH) chains are responsible for binding to the
antigen. These loops are referred to as thecomplementarity
determining regions (CDRs). The
structures of these CDRs have been clustered and classified by Chothia et al. and
more recently by North et al. and Nikoloudis et al. In the framework
of the immune
network theory, CDRs are also
called idiotypes. According to immune network theory, the adaptive immune
system is regulated by interactions between idiotypes.
The
base of the Y plays a role in modulating immune cell activity. This region is
called the Fc (Fragment, crystallizable)
region, and is composed of two heavy
chains that contribute two or three constant domains depending on the class of
the antibody. Thus, the Fc region ensures that each antibody generates an
appropriate immune response for a given antigen, by binding to a specific class
of Fc receptors,
and other immune molecules, such as complement proteins.
By doing this, it mediates different physiologicaleffects
including recognition of opsonized particles
(binding to FcγR), lysis of
cells (binding to complement), and degranulation of mast cells, basophils,
and eosinophils (binding
to FcεR).
In
summary, the Fab region of the antibody determines antigen specificity while
the Fc region of the antibody determines the antibody's class effect. Since
only the constant domains of the heavy chains make up the Fc region of an
antibody, the classes of heavy chain in antibodies determine their class
effects. Possible classes of heavy chains in antibodies include alpha, gamma,
delta, epsilon, and mu, and they define the antibody's isotypes IgA, G, D, E,
and M, respectively. This infers different isotypes of antibodies have
different class effects due to their different Fc regions binding and
activating different types of receptors. Possible class effects of antibodies
include: Opsonisation, agglutination, haemolysis, complement activation, mast
cell degranulation, and neutralisation (though this class effect may be
mediated by the Fab region rather than the Fc region). It also implies that
Fab-mediated effects are directed at microbes or toxins, whilst Fc mediated
effects are directed at effector cells or effector molecules (see below).
Activated
B cells differentiate into
either antibody-producing cells called plasma cells that
secrete soluble antibody or memory cells that
survive in the body for years afterward in order to allow the immune system to
remember an antigen and respond faster upon future exposures.[28]
At
the prenatal and
neonatal stages of life, the presence of antibodies is provided by passive immunization from
the mother. Early endogenous antibody production varies for different kinds of
antibodies, and usually appear within the first years of life. Since antibodies
exist freely in the bloodstream, they are said to be part of the humoral
immune system. Circulating antibodies are produced by clonal B cells
that specifically respond to only one antigen (an
example is a virus capsid protein fragment).
Antibodies contribute toimmunity in
three ways: They prevent pathogens from entering or damaging cells by binding
to them; they stimulate removal of pathogens by macrophages and
other cells by coating the pathogen; and they trigger destruction of pathogens
by stimulating other immune responses such
as the complement pathway.[29] Antibodies
will also trigger vasoactive amine degranulation to contribute to immunity
against certain types of antigens (helminths, allergens).
The secreted mammalian IgM has five Ig units. Each Ig unit
(labeled 1) has two epitope binding Fab regions,
so IgM is capable of binding up to 10 epitopes.
Activation of complement
Antibodies
that bind to surface antigens (for example, on bacteria) will attract the first
component of the complement cascade with
their Fc region and
initiate activation of the "classical" complement system. This
results in the killing of bacteria in two ways. First, the binding of the
antibody and complement molecules marks the microbe for ingestion by phagocytes in
a process called opsonization;
these phagocytes are attracted by certain complement molecules generated in the
complement cascade. Second, some complement system components form a membrane
attack complex to assist
antibodies to kill the bacterium directly (bacteriolysis).
Activation of effector cells
To
combat pathogens that replicate outside cells, antibodies bind to pathogens to
link them together, causing them to agglutinate.
Since an antibody has at least two paratopes, it can bind more than one antigen
by binding identical epitopes carried on the surfaces of these antigens. By
coating the pathogen, antibodies stimulate effector functions against the
pathogen in cells that recognize their Fc region.
Those
cells that recognize coated pathogens have Fc receptors, which, as the name
suggests, interact with the Fc region of
IgA, IgG, and IgE antibodies. The engagement of a particular antibody with the
Fc receptor on a particular cell triggers an effector function of that cell;
phagocytes will phagocytose, mast cells and neutrophils will degranulate, natural killer cells will
release cytokines and cytotoxic molecules;
that will ultimately result in destruction of the invading microbe. The
activation of natural killer cells by antibodies initiates a cytotoxic
mechanism known as antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC)
– this process may explain the efficacy of monoclonal
antibodies used in biological therapies
against cancer.
The Fc receptors are isotype-specific, which gives greater flexibility to the
immune system, invoking only the appropriate immune mechanisms for distinct
pathogens.
Natural antibodies
Humans
and higher primates also produce "natural antibodies" that are
present in serum before viral infection. Natural antibodies have been defined
as antibodies that are produced without any previous infection, vaccination,
other foreign antigen exposure or passive immunization.
These antibodies can activate the classical complement pathway leading to lysis
of enveloped virus particles long before the adaptive immune response is
activated. Many natural antibodies are directed against the disaccharide galactoseα(1,3)-galactose
(α-Gal), which is found as a terminal sugar on glycosylated cell
surface proteins, and generated in response to production of this sugar by
bacteria contained in the human gut. Rejection of xenotransplant
organs is thought to be, in part, the result of natural
antibodies circulating in the serum of the recipient binding to α-Gal antigens
expressed on the donor tissue.
Immunoglobulin
diversity
Virtually
all microbes can trigger an antibody response. Successful recognition and
eradication of many different types of microbes requires diversity among
antibodies; their amino acid composition varies allowing them to interact with
many different antigens. It has been estimated that humans generate about
10 billion different antibodies, each capable of binding a distinct
epitope of an antigen. Although a huge repertoire of different antibodies
is generated in a single individual, the number of genes available
to make these proteins is limited by the size of the human genome. Several
complex genetic mechanisms have evolved that allow vertebrate B cells to
generate a diverse pool of antibodies from a relatively small number of
antibody genes.
Domain variability
The complementarity determining regions of the heavy
chain are shown in red (PDB: 1IGT)
The
chromosomal region that encodes an antibody is large and contains several
distinct gene loci for each domain of the antibody—the chromosome region
containing heavy chain genes (IGH@)
is found on chromosome 14,
and the loci containing lambda and kappa light chain genes (IGL@ and IGK@)
are found on chromosomes 22 and 2 in
humans. One of these domains is called the variable domain, which is present in
each heavy and light chain of every antibody, but can differ in different
antibodies generated from distinct B cells. Differences, between the variable
domains, are located on three loops known as hypervariable regions (HV-1, HV-2
and HV-3) or complementarity
determining regions (CDR1, CDR2
and CDR3). CDRs are supported within the variable domains by conserved
framework regions. The heavy chain locus contains about 65 different variable
domain genes that all differ in their CDRs. Combining these genes with an array
of genes for other domains of the antibody generates a large cavalry of
antibodies with a high degree of variability. This combination is called V(D)J
recombination discussed below.
V(D)J recombination
For more details on this topic,
see V(D)J
recombination.
Simplified overview of V(D)J recombination of
immunoglobulin heavy chains
Somatic
recombination of immunoglobulins, also known as V(D)J recombination,
involves the generation of a unique immunoglobulin variable region. The
variable region of each immunoglobulin heavy or light chain is encoded in
several pieces—known as gene segments (subgenes). These segments are called
variable (V), diversity (D) and joining (J) segments. V, D and J segments
are found in Ig
heavy chains, but only V and J segments are found in Ig
light chains. Multiple copies of the V, D and J gene segments exist,
and are tandemly arranged in the genomes of mammals.
In the bone marrow, each developing B cell will assemble an immunoglobulin
variable region by randomly selecting and combining one V, one D and one J gene
segment (or one V and one J segment in the light chain). As there are multiple
copies of each type of gene segment, and different combinations of gene
segments can be used to generate each immunoglobulin variable region, this
process generates a huge number of antibodies, each with different paratopes, and thus
different antigen specificities. Interestingly, the rearrangement of
several subgenes (i.e., V2 family) for lambda light chain immunoglobulin is
coupled with the activation of microRNA miR-650, which further influences
biology of B-cells.
RAG
proteins play an important role with V(D)J recombination in cutting DNA at a
particular region. Without the presence of these proteins, V(D)J
recombination would not occur.
After
a B cell produces a functional immunoglobulin gene during V(D)J recombination,
it cannot express any other variable region (a process known as allelic exclusion)
thus each B cell can produce antibodies containing only one kind of variable
chain.
Somatic hypermutation and affinity maturation
Further information: Somatic
hypermutation and Affinity
maturation
Following
activation with antigen, B cells begin to proliferate rapidly.
In these rapidly dividing cells, the genes encoding the variable domains of the
heavy and light chains undergo a high rate of point mutation,
by a process called somatic hypermutation (SHM). SHM results
in approximately one nucleotide change
per variable gene, per cell division. As a consequence, any daughter B
cells will acquire slight amino acid differences
in the variable domains of their antibody chains.
This
serves to increase the diversity of the antibody pool and impacts the
antibody's antigen-binding affinity. Some
point mutations will result in the production of antibodies that have a weaker
interaction (low affinity) with their antigen than the original antibody, and
some mutations will generate antibodies with a stronger interaction (high
affinity). B cells that express high affinity antibodies on their surface
will receive a strong survival signal during interactions with other cells,
whereas those with low affinity antibodies will not, and will die by apoptosis. Thus,
B cells expressing antibodies with a higher affinity for the antigen will
outcompete those with weaker affinities for function and survival. The process
of generating antibodies with increased binding affinities is called affinity
maturation. Affinity maturation occurs in mature B cells after V(D)J
recombination, and is dependent on help from helper T cells.
Mechanism of class switch recombination that allows
isotype switching in activated B cells
Class switching
Isotype
or class switching is a biological process occurring
after activation of the B cell, which allows the cell to produce different
classes of antibody (IgA, IgE, or IgG). The different classes of antibody,
and thus effector functions, are defined by the constant (C) regions of the
immunoglobulin heavy chain. Initially, naive B cells express only cell-surface
IgM and IgD with identical antigen binding regions. Each isotype is adapted for
a distinct function; therefore, after activation, an antibody with an IgG, IgA,
or IgE effector function might be required to effectively eliminate an antigen.
Class switching allows different daughter cells from the same activated B cell
to produce antibodies of different isotypes. Only the constant region of the
antibody heavy chain changes during class switching; the variable regions, and
therefore antigen specificity, remain unchanged. Thus, the progeny of a single
B cell can produce antibodies, all specific for the same antigen, but with the ability
to produce the effector function appropriate for each antigenic challenge.
Class switching is triggered by cytokines; the isotype generated depends on
which cytokines are present in the B cell environment.
Class
switching occurs in the heavy chain gene locus by
a mechanism called class switch recombination (CSR). This mechanism relies on conserved nucleotide motifs,
called switch (S) regions, found in DNA upstream
of each constant region gene (except in the δ-chain). The DNA strand is broken
by the activity of a series of enzymes at
two selected S-regions. The variable domain exon is
rejoined through a process called non-homologous
end joining (NHEJ) to the desired
constant region (γ, α or ε). This process results in an immunoglobulin gene
that encodes an antibody of a different isotype.
Affinity designations
A
group of antibodies can be called monovalent (or specific)
if they have affinity for the same epitope, or for the same antigen (but
potentially different epitopes on the molecule), or for the same strain of
microorganism (but potentially different antigens on or in it). In
contrast, a group of antibodies can be called polyvalent (or unspecific)
if they have affinity for various antigens or microorganisms. Intravenous
immunoglobulin, if not otherwise
noted, consists of polyvalent IgG. In contrast, monoclonal
antibodies are monovalent for the
same epitope.
Asymmetrical antibodies
Heterodimeric
antibodies, which are also asymmetrical and antibodies, allow for greater
flexibility and new formats for attaching a variety of drugs to the antibody
arms. One of the general formats for a heterodimeric antibody is the
“knobs-into-holes” format. This format is specific to the heavy chain part of
the constant region in antibodies. The “knobs” part is engineered by replacing
a small amino acid with a larger one. It fits into the “hole”, which is
engineered by replacing a large amino acid with a smaller one. What connects
the “knobs” to the “holes” are the disulfide bonds between each chain. The
“knobs-into-holes” shape facilitates antibody dependent cell mediated
cytotoxicity. Single chain variable fragments (scFv) are connected to the
variable domain of the heavy and light chain via a short linker peptide. The
linker is rich in glycine, which gives it more flexibility, and serine/threonine,
which gives it specificity. Two different scFv fragments can be connected
together, via a hinge region, to the constant domain of the heavy chain or the
constant domain of the light chain. This gives the antibody specificity,
allowing for the binding specificities of two different antigens. The
“knobs-into-holes” format enhances heterodimer formation but doesn’t suppress
homodimer formation.
To
further improve the function of heterodimeric antibodies, many scientists are
looking towards artificial constructs. Artificial antibodies are largely
diverse protein motifs that use the functional strategy of the antibody
molecule, but aren’t limited by the loop and framework structural constraints
of the natural antibody. Being able to control the combinational design of
the sequence and three-dimensional space could transcend the natural design and
allow for the attachment of different combinations of drugs to the arms.
Heterodimeric
antibodies have a greater range in shapes they can take and the drugs that are
attached to the arms don’t have to be the same on each arm, allowing for
different combinations of drugs to be used in cancer treatment. Pharmaceuticals
are able to produce highly functional bispecific, and even multispecific,
antibodies. The degree to which they can function is impressive given that such
a change shape from the natural form should lead to decreased functionality.
Medical applications
Disease diagnosis
Detection
of particular antibodies is a very common form of medical diagnostics,
and applications such as serology depend
on these methods. For example, in biochemical assays for disease
diagnosis, a titer of
antibodies directed against Epstein-Barr virus or Lyme disease is
estimated from the blood. If those antibodies are not present, either the
person is not infected or the infection occurred a very long
time ago, and the B cells generating these specific antibodies have naturally
decayed.
In clinical immunology,
levels of individual classes of immunoglobulins are measured by nephelometry (or
turbidimetry) to characterize the antibody profile of patient. Elevations in
different classes of immunoglobulins are sometimes useful in determining the
cause of liver damage
in patients for whom the diagnosis is unclear. For example, elevated IgA
indicates alcoholic cirrhosis,
elevated IgM indicates viral hepatitis and primary
biliary cirrhosis, while IgG is
elevated in viral hepatitis, autoimmune hepatitis and
cirrhosis.
Autoimmune disorders can
often be traced to antibodies that bind the body's own epitopes;
many can be detected through blood tests.
Antibodies directed against red blood cellsurface
antigens in immune mediated hemolytic anemia are
detected with the Coombs test. The
Coombs test is also used for antibody screening in blood transfusionpreparation
and also for antibody screening in antenatal women.
Practically,
several immunodiagnostic methods based on detection of complex antigen-antibody
are used to diagnose infectious diseases, for example ELISA,immunofluorescence, Western blot, immunodiffusion, immunoelectrophoresis,
and magnetic immunoassay.
Antibodies raised against human chorionic gonadotropin are used in over-the-counter
pregnancy tests.
New
dioxaborolane chemistry enables radioactive fluoride (18F)
labeling of antibodies, which allows for positron
emission tomography (PET) imaging
of cancer.
Disease therapy
Targeted monoclonal
antibody therapy is employed to
treat diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, and
many forms of cancer including non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, colorectal cancer, head and neck cancer and breast cancer. Some
immune deficiencies, such as X-linked
agammaglobulinemia and hypogammaglobulinemia,
result in partial or complete lack of antibodies. These diseases are often
treated by inducing a short term form of immunity called passive immunity.
Passive immunity is achieved through the transfer of ready-made antibodies in
the form of human or animal serum,
pooled immunoglobulin or monoclonal antibodies, into the affected individual.
Prenatal therapy
Rhesus factor,
also known as Rhesus D (RhD) antigen, is an antigen found on red blood cells;
individuals that are Rhesus-positive (Rh+) have this antigen on their red blood
cells and individuals that are Rhesus-negative (Rh–) do not. During
normal childbirth,
delivery trauma or complications during pregnancy, blood from a fetus can
enter the mother's system. In the case of an Rh-incompatible mother and child,
consequential blood mixing may sensitize an Rh- mother to the Rh antigen on the
blood cells of the Rh+ child, putting the remainder of the pregnancy,
and any subsequent pregnancies, at risk for hemolytic
disease of the newborn.
Rho(D)
immune globulin antibodies are
specific for human Rhesus D (RhD) antigen. Anti-RhD antibodies are
administered as part of a prenatal treatment regimen to
prevent sensitization that may occur when a Rhesus-negative mother has a
Rhesus-positive fetus. Treatment of a mother with Anti-RhD antibodies prior to
and immediately after trauma and delivery destroys Rh antigen in the mother's
system from the fetus. It is important to note that this occurs before the
antigen can stimulate maternal B cells to "remember" Rh antigen by
generating memory B cells. Therefore, her humoral immune system will not make
anti-Rh antibodies, and will not attack the Rhesus antigens of the current or
subsequent babies. Rho(D) Immune Globulin treatment prevents sensitization that
can lead to Rh disease,
but does not prevent or treat the underlying disease itself.
Research
applications
Immunofluorescence image
of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton. Actinfilaments are shown in red,microtubules in
green, and thenuclei in
blue.
Specific
antibodies are produced by injecting an antigen into
a mammal,
such as a mouse, rat, rabbit, goat, sheep,
or horse for
large quantities of antibody. Blood isolated from these animals contains polyclonal
antibodies—multiple antibodies
that bind to the same antigen—in the serum,
which can now be called antiserum.
Antigens are also injected into chickens for
generation of polyclonal antibodies in egg yolk. To
obtain antibody that is specific for a single epitope of an antigen,
antibody-secreting lymphocytes are
isolated from the animal andimmortalized by
fusing them with a cancer cell line. The fused cells are called hybridomas, and will
continually grow and secrete antibody in culture. Single hybridoma cells are
isolated by dilution cloning to
generate cell clones that
all produce the same antibody; these antibodies are called monoclonal
antibodies. Polyclonal
and monoclonal antibodies are often purified using Protein A/G or antigen-affinity
chromatography.
In
research, purified antibodies are used in many applications. Antibodies for
research applications can be found directly from antibody suppliers, or through
use of a specialist search engine. Research antibodies are most commonly used
to identify and locate intracellular andextracellular proteins.
Antibodies are used in flow cytometry to
differentiate cell types by the proteins they express; different types of cell
express different combinations of cluster
of differentiation molecules on
their surface, and produce different intracellular and secretable proteins. They
are also used in immunoprecipitation to
separate proteins and anything bound to them (co-immunoprecipitation) from
other molecules in a cell lysate, in Western blot analyses
to identify proteins separated by electrophoresis, and
in immunohistochemistry orimmunofluorescence to
examine protein expression in tissue sections or to locate proteins within
cells with the assistance of amicroscope. Proteins
can also be detected and quantified with antibodies, using ELISA and ELISPOT techniques.
Reproducibility
in Science
Antibodies
used in research are some of the most powerful, yet most problematic reagents
with a tremendous number of factors that must be controlled in any experiment
including cross reactivity, or the antibody recognizing multiple epitopes and
affinity, which can vary widely different depending on experimental conditions
such as pH, solvent, state of tissue etc. Multiple attempts have been made to
improve both the way that researchers validate antibodies and ways in
which they report on antibodies. Researchers using antibodies in their work
need to record them correctly in order to allow their research to be
reproducible (and therefore tested, and qualified by other researchers). Less
than half of research antibodies referenced in academic papers can be easily
identified. Papers published in F1000 in
2014 and 2015 provide researchers with a guide for reporting research antibody
use. The RRID paper, is co-published in 4 journals that implemented
the RRIDs Standard
for research resource citation, which draws data from the antibodyregistry.org
as the source of antibody identifiers.
Regulatory
validation of monoclonal antibody products
for human use
Production
and testing:
Traditionally,
most antibodies are produced by hybridoma cell lines
through immortalization of antibody-producing cells by chemically-induced
fusion with myeloma cells. In some cases, additional fusions with other lines
have created "triomas" and "quadromas". The manufacturing
process should be appropriately described and validated. Validation studies
should at least include:
- The
demonstration that the process is able to produce in good quality (the
process should be validated)
- The efficiency of the antibody purification (all impurities and virus must be eliminated)
- The characterization
of purified antibody (physicochemical characterization, immunological properties, biological activities, contaminants)
- Determination
of the virus clearance studies
Before clinical trials,
studies of product safety and feasibility have to be performed:
- Product safety testing:
Sterility (bacteria and fungi), In vitro and in vivo testing for
adventitious viruses, Murine retrovirus testing... Product safety data
needed before the initiation of feasibility trials in serious or
immediately life-threatening conditions, it serves to evaluate dangerous
potential of the product.
- Feasibility testing:
These are pilot studies whose objectives include, among others, early
characterization of safety and initial proof of concept in a small
specific patient population (in vito or in vivo testing).
Preclinical
studies:
Example of tissue cross-reactivity on human tissue microarray
- Testing cross-reactivity of antibody : to highlight unwanted
interactions (toxicity) of antibodies with previously characterized
tissues. This study can be performed in vitro (Reactivity of the antibody
or immunoconjugate should be determined with a quick-frozen adult tissues)
or in vivo (with appropriates animal models). More informations about in
vitro cross-reactivity testing.
- Preclinical pharmacology and toxicity testing : Preclinical safety testing of antibody is designed to
identify possible toxicities in humans, to estimate the likelihood and
severity of potential adverse events in humans, and to identify a safe
starting dose and dose escalation, when possible.
- Animal toxicity
studies : Acute toxicity testing, Repeat-dose toxicity testing,
Long-term toxicity testinghttp://www.animalresearch.info/en/drug-development/safety-testing/
- Pharmacokinetics
and pharmacodynamics testing : Use for determinate clinical dosages,
antibody activities (AUC, pharmacodynamics, biodistribution, ...),
evaluation of the potential clinical effects
Structure prediction
The
importance of antibodies in health care and the biotechnology industry
demands knowledge of their structures at high resolution.
This information is used for protein engineering,
modifying the antigen binding affinity, and identifying an epitope, of a given
antibody. X-ray
crystallography is one
commonly used method for determining antibody structures. However,
crystallizing an antibody is often laborious and time-consuming. Computational
approaches provide a cheaper and faster alternative to crystallography, but
their results are more equivocal, since they do not produce empirical
structures. Online web servers such as Web Antibody Modeling (WAM) and Prediction
of Immunoglobulin Structure (PIGS) enables computational modeling
of antibody variable regions. Rosetta Antibody is a novel antibody FV region
structure prediction server,
which incorporates sophisticated techniques to minimize CDR loops and optimize
the relative orientation of the light and heavy chains, as well as homology models
that predict successful docking of antibodies with their unique antigen.
The
ability to describe the antibody through binding affinity to the antigen is
supplemented by information on antibody structure and amino acid sequences for
the purpose of patent claims.
History
The
first use of the term "antibody" occurred in a text by Paul Ehrlich.
The term Antikörper (the German word for antibody)
appears in the conclusion of his article "Experimental Studies on
Immunity", published in October 1891, which states that, "if two
substances give rise to two different antikörper, then they themselves must be
different". However, the term
was not accepted immediately and several other terms for antibody were
proposed; these included Immunkörper, Amboceptor, Zwischenkörper, substance
sensibilisatrice, copula, Desmon, philocytase, fixateur,
and Immunisin. The word antibody has formal
analogy to the word antitoxin and
a similar concept to Immunkörper(immune body in
English). As such, the original construction of the word contains a
logical flaw; the antitoxin is something directed against a toxin, while the
antibody is a body directed against something.
Angel of the West (2008)
by Julian Voss-Andreae is
a sculpture based on the antibody structure published by E. Padlan. Created
for the Florida campus ofthe
Scripps Research Institute, the antibody
is placed into a ring referencingLeonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man thus
highlighting the similarity of the antibody and the human body.
The
study of antibodies began in 1890 when Kitasato
Shibasaburō described antibody activity against diphtheria and tetanus toxins.
Kitasato put forward the theory of humoral immunity,
proposing that a mediator in serum could react with a foreign antigen. His
idea prompted Paul Ehrlich to propose the side-chain theory for
antibody and antigen interaction in 1897, when he hypothesized that receptors
(described as "side-chains") on the surface of cells could bind
specifically to toxins –
in a "lock-and-key" interaction – and that this binding reaction
is the trigger for the production of antibodies. Other researchers
believed that antibodies existed freely in the blood and, in 1904, Almroth Wright suggested
that soluble antibodies coated bacteria to
label them for phagocytosis and
killing; a process that he named opsoninization.
Michael Heidelberger
In
the 1920s, Michael Heidelberger and Oswald Avery observed
that antigens could be precipitated by antibodies and went on to show that
antibodies are made of protein. The biochemical properties of
antigen-antibody-binding interactions were examined in more detail in the late
1930s by John Marrack. The
next major advance was in the 1940s, when Linus Paulingconfirmed
the lock-and-key theory proposed by Ehrlich by showing that the interactions
between antibodies and antigens depend more on their shape than their chemical composition. In
1948, Astrid Fagreaus discovered that B cells, in the form of plasma cells,
were responsible for generating antibodies.
Further
work concentrated on characterizing the structures of the antibody proteins. A
major advance in these structural studies was the discovery in the early 1960s
by Gerald Edelman and
Joseph Gally of the antibody light
chain, and their realization that this protein is the same as
the Bence-Jones
protein described in 1845 by Henry Bence Jones. Edelman
went on to discover that antibodies are composed of disulfide bond-linked
heavy and light chains. Around the same time, antibody-binding (Fab) and
antibody tail (Fc) regions of IgG were characterized by Rodney Porter. Together,
these scientists deduced the structure and complete amino acid sequence
of IgG, a feat for which they were jointly awarded the 1972 Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine. The
Fv fragment was prepared and characterized by David Givol. While most of
these early studies focused on IgM and IgG, other immunoglobulin isotypes were
identified in the 1960s: Thomas Tomasi discovered secretory antibody (IgA); David
S. Rowe and John L. Fahey discovered IgD; and Kimishige
Ishizaka and Teruko Ishizaka discovered IgE and showed it was a class of
antibodies involved in allergic reactions. In a landmark series of experiments
beginning in 1976, Susumu Tonegawa showed
that genetic material can rearrange itself to form the vast array of available
antibodies.
Antibody
mimetics are organic compounds that, like antibodies, can specifically bind
antigens. They are usually artificial peptides or proteins with a molar mass of
about 3 to 20 kDa. Nucleic acids and small molecules are sometimes considered
antibody mimetics, but not artificial antibodies, antibody fragments and fusion
proteins are composed from these. Common advantages over antibodies are better
solubility, tissue penetration, stability towards heat and enzymes, and
comparatively low production costs. Antibody mimetics such as the Affimer and
the DARPin have being
developed and commercialised as research, diagnostic and therapeutic agents.
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