Abstract
We have studied two aspects of the IgE immune response. First, we have compared the kinetics of the IgE response to the T cell-dependent antigen ph-Ox coupled to ovalbumin with that of the IgG1 response and we have assessed the quality of the IgE response. Second, we have studied the generation of somatic diversity, understood as the combined effect of somatic mutation and the selection of D(iversity) and J(oining) elements, in germinal center B cells at the molecular level, using the germ-line sequence of the prototype anti-ph-Ox heavy chain variable element V(H)Ox1 as reference. We evaluated sequences derived from mu-, gamma 1- and epsilon-variable elements and showed that somatic diversification was different for all isotypes studied. We further compared the IgE responses of wild-type mice with those of mice expressing a truncated cytoplasmic IgE tail (IgE(KVK Delta tail)). IgE(KVK Delta tail) mice showed a more diverse sequence pattern. We corroborated previous results suggesting that short CDR3 regions are indicative for high-affinity antibodies by measuring relative affinities of phage-expressed Fab fragments with prototype long and short CDR3 regions. Therefore, the composition of the antigen-receptor is responsible for the selection process and the expansion of antigen-specific cells, leading to an isotype-specific antibody repertoire.
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