4.8 Article

Unraveling the Macromolecular Pathways of IgG Oligomerization and Complement Activation on Antigenic Surfaces

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 7, Pages 4787-4796

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b02220

Keywords

IgG hexamers; IgG oligomerization; classical complement pathway; Cl; immune complex formation; high-speed atomic force microscopy; native mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. European Fund for Regional Development (EFRE, IWB2020)
  2. Federal State of Upper Austria
  3. Netherlands Proteomics Centre [184.032.201]
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [SPI.2017.028]

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IgG antibodies play a central role in protection against pathogens by their ability to alert and activate the innate immune system. Here, we show that IgGs assemble into oligomers on antigenic surfaces through an ordered, Fc domain-mediated process that can be modulated by protein engineering. Using high-speed atomic force microscopy, we unraveled the molecular events of IgG oligomer formation on surfaces. IgG molecules were recruited from solution although assembly of monovalently binding molecules also occurred through lateral diffusion. Monomers were observed to assemble into hexamers with all intermediates detected, but in which only hexamers bound Cl. Functional characterization of oligomers on cells also demonstrated that Cl binding to IgG hexamers was a prerequisite for maximal activation, whereas tetramers, trimers, and dimers were mostly inactive. We present a dynamic IgG oligomerization model, which provides a framework for exploiting the macromolecular assembly of IgGs on surfaces for tool, immunotherapy, and vaccine design.

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