Reconstituted B cell receptor signaling reveals carbohydrate-dependent mode of activation.
Authors | |
Abstract | Activation of immune cells (but not B cells) with lectins is widely known. We used the structurally defined interaction between influenza hemagglutinin (HA) and its cell surface receptor sialic acid (SA) to identify a B cell receptor (BCR) activation modality that proceeded through non-cognate interactions with antigen. Using a new approach to reconstitute antigen-receptor interactions in a human reporter B cell line, we found that sequence-defined BCRs from the human germline repertoire could be triggered by both complementarity to influenza HA and a separate mode of signaling that relied on multivalent ligation of BCR sialyl-oligosaccharide. The latter suggested a new mechanism for priming naïve B cell responses and manifested as the induction of SA-dependent pan-activation by peripheral blood B cells. BCR crosslinking in the absence of complementarity is a superantigen effect induced by some microbial products to subvert production of antigen-specific immune responses. B cell superantigen activity through affinity for BCR carbohydrate is discussed. |
Year of Publication | 2016
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Journal | Sci Rep
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Volume | 6
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Pages | 36298
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Date Published | 2016 Oct 31
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ISSN | 2045-2322
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DOI | 10.1038/srep36298
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PubMed ID | 27796362
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PubMed Central ID | PMC5087089
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Links | |
Grant list | P30 AI060354 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
S10 OD010724 / OD / NIH HHS / United States
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