Modulation by epitope‐specific antibodies of class II MHC‐restricted presentation of the tetanus toxin antigen

C Watts, A Antoniou, B Manoury… - Immunological …, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
C Watts, A Antoniou, B Manoury, EW Hewitt, LM Mckay, L Grayson, NR Fairweather…
Immunological reviews, 1998Wiley Online Library
Above a certain affinity the dissociation rate of monovalent antigen from antibody becomes
slower than the time taken for antigen capture, endocytosis and processing by professional
antigen presenting cells. Thus, when high affinity antibodies drive antigen uptake, either
directly via B‐cell membrane immunoglobulin or indirectly via Fc receptors, the substrate for
processing may frequently be an antigen/antibody complex. Here we review studies using
the tetanus toxin antigen which show that bound antibodies can dramatically affect …
Summary
Above a certain affinity the dissociation rate of monovalent antigen from antibody becomes slower than the time taken for antigen capture, endocytosis and processing by professional antigen presenting cells. Thus, when high affinity antibodies drive antigen uptake, either directly via B‐cell membrane immunoglobulin or indirectly via Fc receptors, the substrate for processing may frequently be an antigen/antibody complex. Here we review studies using the tetanus toxin antigen which show that bound antibodies can dramatically affect proteolytic processing, dependent on the epitope specificity and multiplicity of antibodies bound. Certain antibodies protect or ‘footprint’ specific domains of the antigen during processing in B‐cell clones resulting in modulation of loading of class II MHC‐restricted T‐cell epitopes, Processing and class II MHC loading of some T‐cell epitopes within the footprinted region was hindered, as might be expected, but. surprisingly, presentation of other T‐cell epitopes was boosted considerably These studies show that protein/protein complexes can be processed in an unpredictable fashion by antigen presenting cells and indicate a possible mechanism whereby cryptic T‐cell epitopes might be revealed in autoimmune disease.
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