Reconstructing a B-Cell Clonal Lineage. II. Mutation, Selection, and Affinity Maturation.

dc.contributor.author

Kepler, Thomas B

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Munshaw, Supriya

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Wiehe, Kevin

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Zhang, Ruijun

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Yu, Jae-Sung

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Woods, Christopher W

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Denny, Thomas N

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Tomaras, Georgia D

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Alam, S Munir

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Moody, M Anthony

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Kelsoe, Garnett

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Liao, Hua-Xin

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Haynes, Barton F

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Switzerland

dc.date.accessioned

2015-11-18T16:34:40Z

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2014

dc.description.abstract

Affinity maturation of the antibody response is a fundamental process in adaptive immunity during which B-cells activated by infection or vaccination undergo rapid proliferation accompanied by the acquisition of point mutations in their rearranged immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and selection for increased affinity for the eliciting antigen. The rate of somatic hypermutation at any position within an Ig gene is known to depend strongly on the local DNA sequence, and Ig genes have region-specific codon biases that influence the local mutation rate within the gene resulting in increased differential mutability in the regions that encode the antigen-binding domains. We have isolated a set of clonally related natural Ig heavy chain-light chain pairs from an experimentally infected influenza patient, inferred the unmutated ancestral rearrangements and the maturation intermediates, and synthesized all the antibodies using recombinant methods. The lineage exhibits a remarkably uniform rate of improvement of the effective affinity to influenza hemagglutinin (HA) over evolutionary time, increasing 1000-fold overall from the unmutated ancestor to the best of the observed antibodies. Furthermore, analysis of selection reveals that selection and mutation bias were concordant even at the level of maturation to a single antigen. Substantial improvement in affinity to HA occurred along mutationally preferred paths in sequence space and was thus strongly facilitated by the underlying local codon biases.

dc.identifier

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24795717

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10899

dc.language

eng

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Frontiers Media SA

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Front Immunol

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10.3389/fimmu.2014.00170

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antibody affinity maturation

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antibody selection

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experimental influenza infection

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phylogenetics

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somatic hypermutation

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Reconstructing a B-Cell Clonal Lineage. II. Mutation, Selection, and Affinity Maturation.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Woods, Christopher W|0000-0001-7240-2453

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Tomaras, Georgia D|0000-0001-8076-1931

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Alam, S Munir|0000-0003-0941-0703

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Moody, M Anthony|0000-0002-3890-5855

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Kelsoe, Garnett|0000-0002-8770-040X

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24795717

pubs.begin-page

170

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Basic Science Departments

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Duke Human Vaccine Institute

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Global Health Institute

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Immunology

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Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Medicine

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Medicine, Duke Human Vaccine Institute

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Medicine, Infectious Diseases

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Molecular Genetics and Microbiology

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Pathology

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Pediatrics

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Pediatrics, Infectious Diseases

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School of Medicine

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Staff

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Surgery

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Surgery, Surgical Sciences

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University Institutes and Centers

pubs.publication-status

Published online

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5

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