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Download fileUnraveling the Macromolecular Pathways of IgG Oligomerization and Complement Activation on Antigenic Surfaces
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posted on 06.06.2019, 00:00 authored by Jürgen Strasser, Rob N. de Jong, Frank J. Beurskens, Guanbo Wang, Albert J. R. Heck, Janine Schuurman, Paul W. H. I. Parren, Peter Hinterdorfer, Johannes PreinerIgG antibodies play
a central role in protection against pathogens
by their ability to alert and activate the innate immune system. Here,
we show that IgGs assemble into oligomers on antigenic surfaces through
an ordered, Fc domain-mediated process that can be modulated by protein
engineering. Using high-speed atomic force microscopy, we unraveled
the molecular events of IgG oligomer formation on surfaces. IgG molecules
were recruited from solution although assembly of monovalently binding
molecules also occurred through lateral diffusion. Monomers were observed
to assemble into hexamers with all intermediates detected, but in
which only hexamers bound C1. Functional characterization of oligomers
on cells also demonstrated that C1 binding to IgG hexamers was a prerequisite
for maximal activation, whereas tetramers, trimers, and dimers were
mostly inactive. We present a dynamic IgG oligomerization model, which
provides a framework for exploiting the macromolecular assembly of
IgGs on surfaces for tool, immunotherapy, and vaccine design.
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protein engineeringIgG hexamersIgG oligomerization modelvaccine designC 1. Functional characterizationforce microscopyC 1 bindingFc domain-mediated processIgG OligomerizationMacromolecular Pathwaysantigenic surfacesComplement Activationmonovalently binding moleculesAntigenic Surfaces IgG antibodiesIgG oligomer formationIgG molecules