Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality

The naïve antibody/B-cell receptor (BCR) repertoires of different individuals ought to exhibit significant functional commonality, given that most pathogens trigger an effective antibody response to immunodominant epitopes. Sequence-based repertoire analysis has so far offered little evidence for th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Raybould, MIJ, Marks, C, Kovaltsuk, A, Lewis, AP, Shi, J, Deane, CM
Formato: Journal article
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
_version_ 1826285160594669568
author Raybould, MIJ
Marks, C
Kovaltsuk, A
Lewis, AP
Shi, J
Deane, CM
author_facet Raybould, MIJ
Marks, C
Kovaltsuk, A
Lewis, AP
Shi, J
Deane, CM
author_sort Raybould, MIJ
collection OXFORD
description The naïve antibody/B-cell receptor (BCR) repertoires of different individuals ought to exhibit significant functional commonality, given that most pathogens trigger an effective antibody response to immunodominant epitopes. Sequence-based repertoire analysis has so far offered little evidence for this phenomenon. For example, a recent study estimated the number of shared (‘public’) antibody clonotypes in circulating baseline repertoires to be around 0.02% across ten unrelated individuals. However, to engage the same epitope, antibodies only require a similar binding site structure and the presence of key paratope interactions, which can occur even when their sequences are dissimilar. Here, we search for evidence of geometric similarity/convergence across human antibody repertoires. We first structurally profile naïve (‘baseline’) antibody diversity using snapshots from 41 unrelated individuals, predicting all modellable distinct structures within each repertoire. This analysis uncovers a high (much greater than random) degree of structural commonality. For instance, around 3% of distinct structures are common to the ten most diverse individual samples (‘Public Baseline’ structures). Our approach is the first computational method to find levels of BCR commonality commensurate with epitope immunodominance and could therefore be harnessed to find more genetically distant antibodies with same-epitope complementarity. We then apply the same structural profiling approach to repertoire snapshots from three individuals before and after flu vaccination, detecting a convergent structural drift indicative of recognising similar epitopes (‘Public Response’ structures). We show that Antibody Model Libraries derived from Public Baseline and Public Response structures represent a powerful geometric basis set of low-immunogenicity candidates exploitable for general or target-focused therapeutic antibody screening.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T01:24:41Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:91918ee0-8865-499b-9647-66f55a65546b
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T01:24:41Z
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:91918ee0-8865-499b-9647-66f55a65546b2022-03-26T23:19:36ZPublic Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonalityJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:91918ee0-8865-499b-9647-66f55a65546bEnglishSymplectic ElementsPublic Library of Science2021Raybould, MIJMarks, CKovaltsuk, ALewis, APShi, JDeane, CMThe naïve antibody/B-cell receptor (BCR) repertoires of different individuals ought to exhibit significant functional commonality, given that most pathogens trigger an effective antibody response to immunodominant epitopes. Sequence-based repertoire analysis has so far offered little evidence for this phenomenon. For example, a recent study estimated the number of shared (‘public’) antibody clonotypes in circulating baseline repertoires to be around 0.02% across ten unrelated individuals. However, to engage the same epitope, antibodies only require a similar binding site structure and the presence of key paratope interactions, which can occur even when their sequences are dissimilar. Here, we search for evidence of geometric similarity/convergence across human antibody repertoires. We first structurally profile naïve (‘baseline’) antibody diversity using snapshots from 41 unrelated individuals, predicting all modellable distinct structures within each repertoire. This analysis uncovers a high (much greater than random) degree of structural commonality. For instance, around 3% of distinct structures are common to the ten most diverse individual samples (‘Public Baseline’ structures). Our approach is the first computational method to find levels of BCR commonality commensurate with epitope immunodominance and could therefore be harnessed to find more genetically distant antibodies with same-epitope complementarity. We then apply the same structural profiling approach to repertoire snapshots from three individuals before and after flu vaccination, detecting a convergent structural drift indicative of recognising similar epitopes (‘Public Response’ structures). We show that Antibody Model Libraries derived from Public Baseline and Public Response structures represent a powerful geometric basis set of low-immunogenicity candidates exploitable for general or target-focused therapeutic antibody screening.
spellingShingle Raybould, MIJ
Marks, C
Kovaltsuk, A
Lewis, AP
Shi, J
Deane, CM
Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title_full Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title_fullStr Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title_full_unstemmed Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title_short Public Baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
title_sort public baseline and shared response structures support the theory of antibody repertoire functional commonality
work_keys_str_mv AT raybouldmij publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality
AT marksc publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality
AT kovaltsuka publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality
AT lewisap publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality
AT shij publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality
AT deanecm publicbaselineandsharedresponsestructuressupportthetheoryofantibodyrepertoirefunctionalcommonality