Reconstituted B cell receptor signaling reveals carbohydrate-dependent mode of activation
Author | Villar, Rina F. |
Author | Patel, Jinal |
Author | Weaver, Grant C. |
Author | Kanekiyo, Masaru |
Author | Wheatley, Adam K. |
Author | Yassine, Hadi M. |
Author | Costello, Catherine E. |
Author | Chandler, Kevin B. |
Author | McTamney, Patrick M. |
Author | Nabel, Gary J. |
Author | McDermott, Adrian B. |
Author | Mascola, John R. |
Author | Carr, Steven A. |
Author | Lingwood, Daniel |
Available date | 2016-11-06T06:29:32Z |
Publication Date | 2016-10-31 |
Publication Name | Scientific Reports |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep36298 |
Citation | Villar, R. F. et al. Reconstituted B cell receptor signaling reveals carbohydrate dependent mode of activation. Sci. Rep. 6, 36298 |
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. |
Sponsor | Harvard University CFAR grant (P30 AI060354); the William F. Milton Fund; the Gilead Sciences Research Scholars Program in HIV; and an Broad-Ragon ENDHIV Catalytic Grant (jointly awarded to D.L. and S.A.C.). C.E.C and K.B.C. were supported by P41 GM104602 and S10 OD010724 grants. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Nature Publishing Group |
Subject | Glycobiology Adaptive immunity |
Type | Article |
Volume Number | 6 |
ESSN | 2045-2322 |
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