Pathogenic autoantibodies to IFN-γ act through the impedance of receptor assembly and Fc-mediated response.
Han-Po ShihJing-Ya DingJunel Sotolongo BellónYu-Fang LoPei-Han ChungHe-Ting TingJhan-Jie PengTsai-Yi WuChia-Hao LinChia-Chi LoYou-Ning LinChun-Fu YehJiun-Bo ChenTing-Shu WuYuag-Meng LiuChen-Yen KuoShang Yu WangKun-Hua TuChau Yee NgWei-Te LeiYu-Huan TsaiJou-Han ChenYa-Ting ChuangJing-Yi HuangFelix A ReyHung-Kai ChenTse-Wen ChangJacob PiehlerChih-Yu ChiCheng-Lung KuPublished in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2022)
Anti-interferon (IFN)-γ autoantibodies (AIGAs) are a pathogenic factor in late-onset immunodeficiency with disseminated mycobacterial and other opportunistic infections. AIGAs block IFN-γ function, but their effects on IFN-γ signaling are unknown. Using a single-cell capture method, we isolated 19 IFN-γ-reactive monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) from patients with AIGAs. All displayed high-affinity (KD < 10-9 M) binding to IFN-γ, but only eight neutralized IFN-γ-STAT1 signaling and HLA-DR expression. Signal blockade and binding affinity were correlated and attributed to somatic hypermutations. Cross-competition assays identified three nonoverlapping binding sites (I-III) for AIGAs on IFN-γ. We found that site I mAb neutralized IFN-γ by blocking its binding to IFN-γR1. Site II and III mAbs bound the receptor-bound IFN-γ on the cell surface, abolishing IFN-γR1-IFN-γR2 heterodimerization and preventing downstream signaling. Site III mAbs mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, probably through antibody-IFN-γ complexes on cells. Pathogenic AIGAs underlie mycobacterial infections by the dual blockade of IFN-γ signaling and by eliminating IFN-γ-responsive cells.