Journal article

Structural and functional analyses of antibodies specific for modified core N-glycans suggest a role in TH2 responses


Authors listPlum, Melanie; Tjerrild, Luna; Raiber, Tim; Bantleon, Frank; Bantleon, Sara; Miehe, Michaela; Jabs, Frederic; Seismann, Henning; Moebs, Christian; Pfutzner, Wolfgang; Jakob, Thilo; Andersen, Gregers R.; Spillner, Edzard

Publication year2023

Pages121-130

JournalAllergy

Volume number78

Issue number1

ISSN0105-4538

eISSN1398-9995

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1111/all.15417

PublisherWiley


Abstract
Background Immune responses to N-glycan structures from allergens and parasites are often associated with pronounced, high affinity IgE reactivities. Cross-reactive carbohydrate determinants (CCDs) are constituted by modified N-glycan core structures and represent the most frequently recognized epitopes in allergic immune responses. Although recently accepted as potentially allergenic epitopes, the biological and clinical relevance as well as structural and functional characteristics of CCD-specific antibodies remain elusive. Methods In order to gain structural insights into the recognition of CCDs, two specific antibody fragments were isolated from a leporid immune repertoire library and converted into human/leporid IgE and IgG formats. The antibody formats were assessed by ELISA and surface plasmon resonance, structural and functional analyses were performed by X-ray crystallography, mediator release, and ELIFAB assays. Results The recombinant IgE exhibited highly specific interactions with different types of CCDs on numerous CCD-carrying glycoproteins. Crystal structures of two CCD-specific antibodies, one of which in complex with a CCD-derived disaccharide emphasize that mechanisms of core glycan epitope recognition are as specific as those governing protein epitope recognition. The rIgE triggered immediate cellular responses via Fc epsilon RI cross-linking and mediated facilitated antigen presentation by binding of IgE/antigen complexes to CD23, a process that also could be blocked by IgG of allergic patients. Conclusions Our study provides evidence for the relevance of N-glycan recognition in T(H)2 responses and corroborates that IgE and IgG antibodies to ubiquitous carbohydrate epitopes can be equivalent to those directed against proteinaceous epitopes with implications for diagnostic and immunotherapeutic concepts.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation stylePlum, M., Tjerrild, L., Raiber, T., Bantleon, F., Bantleon, S., Miehe, M., et al. (2023) Structural and functional analyses of antibodies specific for modified core N-glycans suggest a role in TH2 responses, Allergy, 78(1), pp. 121-130. https://doi.org/10.1111/all.15417

APA Citation stylePlum, M., Tjerrild, L., Raiber, T., Bantleon, F., Bantleon, S., Miehe, M., Jabs, F., Seismann, H., Moebs, C., Pfutzner, W., Jakob, T., Andersen, G., & Spillner, E. (2023). Structural and functional analyses of antibodies specific for modified core N-glycans suggest a role in TH2 responses. Allergy. 78(1), 121-130. https://doi.org/10.1111/all.15417


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:41