Molecular evolution of the human immunoglobulin E response: high incidence of shared mutations and clonal relatedness among epsilon VH5 transcripts from three unrelated patients with atopic dermatitis.
Open Access
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 177 (1) , 99-107
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.177.1.99
Abstract
We have analyzed the nucleotide sequences of 19 epsilon VH5 transcripts derived from in vivo isotype switched peripheral blood B cells of three patients with atopic dermatitis. Comparison with the patients' own germline VH5 gene segments revealed that the epsilon transcripts were derived from both functional members of the human VH5 gene family and harbored numerous somatic mutations (range 5-36 per VH5 gene). In two patients, we detected clonally related but diverged transcripts, permitting the construction of a genealogical tree in one patient. We observed a high proportion of shared silent (S) and replacement (R) mutations among epsilon VH5 sequences derived from all three individuals, even among transcripts descending from the two different germline VH5 gene segments. A remarkably high number of these mutations is shared with previously reported VH5 genes encoding antibodies with defined specificities. The shared S mutations, and likely a fraction of the R mutations, appear to mark preferential sites ("hot spots") of somatic hypermutations in human VH5 genes. The distribution of R and S mutations over complementarity determining region and framework regions in the majority of VH regions deviated from that characteristic of antigen-driven immune response. We hypothesize that the V regions of immunoglobulin E-bearing B cells have accumulated "selectively neutral" mutations over extended periods of clonal expansion, resulting in unusual R/S ratios. We propose that the molecular characteristics of the epsilon VH regions in atopic dermatitis may be representative of antigens that recurrently or chronically stimulate the immune system.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of somatic mutations in kappa transgenes.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1990
- Parallel evolution of antibody variable regions by somatic processes: consecutive shared somatic alterations in VH genes expressed by independently generated hybridomas apparently acquired by point mutation and selection rather than by gene conversion.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1990
- Evolution of antibody structure during the immune response. The differentiative potential of a single B lymphocyte.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1989
- GENE CONVERSION AND THE GENERATION OF ANTIBODY DIVERSITYAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1989
- Mutational hot spots in Ig V region genes of human follicular lymphomas.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1988
- The role of clonal selection and somatic mutation in autoimmunityNature, 1987
- Mutation Drift and Repertoire Shift in the Maturation of the Immune ResponseImmunological Reviews, 1987
- Variable region sequences of murine IgM anti-IgG monoclonal autoantibodies (rheumatoid factors). II. Comparison of hybridomas derived by lipopolysaccharide stimulation and secondary protein immunization.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1987
- Three-Dimensional Structure of an Antigen-Antibody Complex at 2.8 Å ResolutionScience, 1986
- Atopic dermatitisJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1984