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A Single Locus Controls Interferon Gamma-Independent Antiretroviral Neutralizing Antibody Responses.

Citation
Kane, M., et al. “A Single Locus Controls Interferon Gamma-Independent Antiretroviral Neutralizing Antibody Responses.”. Journal Of Virology.
Center University of Chicago
Author Melissa Kane, Felicity Deiss, Alexander Chervonsky, Tatyana Golovkina V
Keywords antiretroviral immunity, class switch recombination, positional cloning
Abstract

An essential step in the development of effective antiviral humoral responses is cytokine-triggered class switch recombination resulting in the production of antibodies of a specific isotype. Most viral and parasitic infections in mice induce predominantly IgG2a-specific antibody responses that are stimulated by interferon gamma (IFN-γ). However, in some mice deficient in IFN-γ, class switching to IgG2a antibodies is relatively unaffected, indicating that another signal(s) can be generated upon viral or parasitic infections that trigger this response. Here, we found that a single recessive locus, provisionally called IFN-γ-independent IgG2a (), confers the ability to produce IFN-γ-independent production of IgG2a antibodies upon retroviral infection. The locus was mapped to chromosome 9 and was found to function in the radiation-resistant compartment. Thus, our data implicate nonhematopoietic cells in activation of antiviral antibody responses in the absence of IFN-γ. Understanding the signals that stimulate antibody production and class switch recombination to specific antibody isotypes is crucial for the development of novel vaccines and adjuvants. While an interferon gamma-mediated switch to the IgG2a isotype upon viral infection in mice has been well established, this investigation reveals a noncanonical, interferon gamma-independent pathway for antiretroviral antibody production and IgG2a class switch recombination that is controlled by a single recessive locus. Furthermore, this study indicates that the radiation-resistant compartment can direct antiviral antibody responses, suggesting that detection of infection by nonhematopoietic cells is involved is stimulating adaptive immunity.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of virology
Volume
92
Issue
16
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1098-5514
DOI
10.1128/JVI.00725-18
Alternate Journal
J. Virol.
PMID
29875252
PMCID
PMC6069202
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