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Conformational diversity facilitates antibody mutation trajectories and discrimination between foreign and self-antigens.

Deborah L BurnettPeter SchofieldDavid B LangleyJennifer JacksonKatherine BourneEmily WilsonBenjamin T PorebskiAshley M BuckleRobert BrinkChristopher C GoodnowDaniel Christ
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Conformational diversity and self-cross-reactivity of antigens have been correlated with evasion from neutralizing antibody responses. We utilized single cell B cell sequencing, biolayer interferometry and X-ray crystallography to trace mutation selection pathways where the antibody response must resolve cross-reactivity between foreign and self-proteins bearing near-identical contact surfaces, but differing in conformational flexibility. Recurring antibody mutation trajectories mediate long-range rearrangements of framework (FW) and complementarity determining regions (CDRs) that increase binding site conformational diversity. These antibody mutations decrease affinity for self-antigen 19-fold and increase foreign affinity 67-fold, to yield a more than 1,250-fold increase in binding discrimination. These results demonstrate how conformational diversity in antigen and antibody does not act as a barrier, as previously suggested, but rather facilitates high affinity and high discrimination between foreign and self.
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