Title: 42.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
142.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- B cells are the basis for the humoral immune
response. - B cells first make a receptor protein on the cell
surface. - If activated by antigen-binding the cell gives
rise to clones of plasma and memory cells. - The plasma cells secrete antibodies into the
blood stream.
242.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- For B cell to develop into a plasma cell, a
T-helper cell (TH) with the same specificity must
also bind to the antigen. - Division and differentiation of the B cell is
stimulated by signals from the TH cell. - As plasma cell develops, ER and ribosomes
increasefor synthesis of antibodies, up to 2000
per second!
342.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Antibodies belong to a protein class called
immunoglobulins. - All are tetramers with two light chains and two
heavy chains, held together by disulfide bonds. - Each polypeptide chain has a constant region and
a variable region.
4Figure 42.10 The Structure of an Immunoglobulin
(Part 1)
5Figure 42.10 The Structure of an Immunoglobulin
(Part 2)
642.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Constant region determines the class of
antibodythe function and destination. - Variable regions are specific for each
immunoglobulin the 3D structure is responsible
for antibody specificity. - The two antigen-binding sites on an
immunoglobulin are identical (bivalent).
742.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Ability to bind two antigen molecules at once,
along with multiple epitopes on many antigens
results in large complexes that are easy targets
for ingestion and breakdown by phagocytes.
8In-Text Art, Ch. 42, p. 868 (1)
942.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Five classes of antibodies are determined by the
constant regions of the heavy chains. - IgG is most abundant soluble greatest amounts
made during secondary immune response.
1042.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Some IgG bind to antigens, then attaches to
macrophages via the heavy chain.
11In-Text Art, Ch. 42, p. 868 (2)
12Table 42.2
1342.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Immunoglobulin diversity results from DNA
rearrangements and other mutations. - Each mature B cell makes only one specific
antibody to a specific epitope. - It would be impossible to have a gene for every
epitope.
1442.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- The B cell genome has alleles for several regions
of an antibody combinations of these alleles
generates diversity. - Each gene encoding an immunoglobulin is a
supergene made by recombination of clusters of
smaller genes.
15Figure 42.11 Heavy-Chain Genes
1642.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- During B cell development the genes are cut out
and rearranged. One gene from each cluster is
chosen randomly for joining, others are deleted. - A unique supergene is assembled.
- Resultenormous diversity of specific antibodies.
1742.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Each B cell precursor assembles two
supergenesone for the light chain, one for the
heavy chain. - Genes for the light chains are made in a similar
way, with an equally large amount of diversity. - Light and heavy chain diversity together yield
about 324 million possibilities.
1842.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Mutations that occur during recombination
generates even more diversity. - Immunoglobulin genes have high spontaneous
mutation rates. - Once the B cells specificity has been
determined, it cannot change.
1942.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Once pre-transcriptional processing is completed,
a supergene is transcribed and translated to
produce an immunoglobulin light or heavy chain. - These combine to form an active immunoglobulin
protein.
20Figure 42.12 Heavy-Chain Gene Recombination and
RNA Splicing
2142.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Class switching
- B cells can make only one type of antibody at a
time, but can change the class of antibody they
make. - Early B cells produce IgMreceptors that
recognize specific antigens.
2242.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- If B cell becomes a plasma cell, a deletion
occurs in the DNA, resulting in an antibody with
a different constant region of the heavy chain. - The antibody still has the same variable regions,
and thus the same specificitybut a different
function. - TH cells induce class switching through cytokine
signals.
23Figure 42.13 Class Switching Exchanging C
Regions
2442.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Specificity of antibodies make them useful for
detecting substances. - Immune responses result in polyclonal antibodies
a mixture of antibodies to respond to multiple
antigens, made by several different B cell
clones. - Monoclonal antibodies are produced by one B cell
clone and have specificity for only one epitope.
2542.4 What Is the Humoral Immune Response?
- Monoclonal antibodies are used for
- Immunoassaysdetecting small amounts of molecules
in tissue or fluids - Immunotherapyusing monoclonal antibodies
specific for antigens on cancer cells. Can be
coupled with radioactive or toxic ligands