Highly individual patterns of virus‑immune IgG effector responses in humans
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Authors
Corrales Aguilar, Eugenia
Trilling, Mirko
Reinhard, Henrike
Falcone, Valeria
Zimmermann, Albert
Adams, Ortwin
Santibanez, Sabine
Hengel, Hartmut
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Abstract
t IgG responses are fundamental to adaptive
immunity and document immunological memory of previous
pathogen encounter. While specific antigen recognition
is mediated by the variable F(ab′)2 domain of IgG, various
effector functions become activated via the constant Fcγ
part bridging IgG-opsonized targets to FcγR-expressing
immune effector cells. Traditionally, neutralizing IgG is
considered the most appropriate correlate of protective
humoral immunity to viruses. However, evidence is increasing
that antiviral IgG mediates protection to viruses via
activation of FcγRs. Using a test system allowing quantitative
detection of virus-immune IgG able to activate FcγRs,
sera of healthy individuals and vaccinees were assessed
with regard to two prototypical human pathogenic viruses:
measles and human cytomegalovirus. Marked differences in the capacity of individuals to generate FcγRI-, FcγRIIand
FcγRIII-activating responses were noted. Comparison
of FcγR-activating IgG with neutralizing and ELISA IgG
concentrations did not correlate for HCMV and only very
poorly for MV. Since neither neutralizing IgG nor overall
IgG responses faithfully predict the activation of FcγRs,
only the simultaneous quantification of IgGs activating
defined FcγRs will aid to delineate individual “immunograms”
of virus IgG immunity. Such new multiparametric
assessment of antiviral IgG qualities could be instrumental
in defining correlates of protection and disease progression.
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Keywords
Antiviral IgG, FcγRs, ELISA, Neutralization, Measles virus, Human cytomegalovirus
Citation
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00430-016-0457-y