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A Germline-Encoded Structural Arginine Trap Underlies the Anti-DNA Reactivity of a Murine V Gene Segment

Autoimmunity may have its origins of early repertoire selection in developmental B cells. Such a primary repertoire is probably shaped by selecting B cells that can efficiently perform productive signaling, stimulated by self-antigens in the bone marrow, such as DNA. In support of that idea, we prev...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: dos Santos Araújo, Ronny Petterson, França, Renato Kaylan Alves, Valadares, Napoleão Fonseca, Maranhão, Andrea Queiroz, Brigido, Marcelo Macedo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8123574/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33926148
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22094541
Descripción
Sumario:Autoimmunity may have its origins of early repertoire selection in developmental B cells. Such a primary repertoire is probably shaped by selecting B cells that can efficiently perform productive signaling, stimulated by self-antigens in the bone marrow, such as DNA. In support of that idea, we previously found a V segment from V(H)10 family that can form antibodies that bind to DNA independent of CDR3 usage. In this paper we designed four antibody fragments in a novel single-chain pre-BCR (scpre-BCR) format containing germinal V gene segments from families known to bind DNA (V(H)10) or not (V(H)4) connected to a murine surrogate light chain (SLC), lacking the highly charged unique region (UR), by a hydrophilic peptide linker. We also tested the influence of CDR2 on DNA reactivity by shuffling the CDR2 loop. The scpre-BCRs were expressed in bacteria. V(H)10 bearing scpre-BCR could bind DNA, while scpre-BCR carrying the V(H)4 segment did not. The CDR2 loop shuffling hampered V(H)10 reactivity while displaying a gain-of-function in the nonbinding V(H)4 germline. We modeled the binding sites demonstrating the conservation of a positivity charged pocket in the V(H)10 CDR2 as the possible cross-reactive structural element. We presented evidence of DNA reactivity hardwired in a V gene, suggesting a structural mechanism for innate autoreactivity. Therefore, while autoreactivity to DNA can lead to autoimmunity, efficiently signaling for B cell development is likely a trade-off mechanism leading to the selection of potentially autoreactive repertoires.