Abstract
IgG is the major immunoglobulin class produced during an immune response against foreign antigens and efficiently provides protection through its bifunctional nature. While the Fab domains confer highly specific recognition of the antigen, the Fc domain mediates a wide range of effector functions that modulate several aspects of innate and adaptive immunity. Engagement of the various types of Fcγ receptors (FcγRs) by an IgG Fc domain can activate distinct immunomodulatory pathways with pleiotropic functional consequences for several leukocyte types. Fc effector functions are not limited to phagocytosis and cytotoxicity of IgG-opsonized targets but exhibit remarkable diversity and include modulation of leukocyte activity and survival, cytokine and chemokine expression, maturation of antigen-presenting cells, antigen processing and presentation, B-cell selection and IgG affinity maturation, as well as regulation of IgG production. These functions are initiated upon specific interactions of the Fc domain with the various types of FcγRs-a process that is largely determined by the structural heterogeneity of the IgG Fc domain. Modulation of the Fc-associated glycan structure and composition along with differences in the primary amino acid sequence among the IgG subclasses represent the two main diversification mechanisms of the Fc domain that generate a spectrum of Fc domain phenotypes with distinct affinity for the various FcγR types and differential capacity to activate immunomodulatory pathways.
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