Immunology
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Teaching and Learning Immunology. Information you never would have searched for!
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Scooped by Gilbert C FAURE
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Signatures of Selection in the Human Antibody Repertoire: Selective Sweeps, Competing Subclones, and Neutral Drift

bioRxiv - the preprint server for biology, operated by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a research and educational institution
Gilbert C FAURE's insight:
Antibodies are created and refined by somatic evolution in B cell populations, which endows the human immune system with the ability to recognize and eliminate diverse pathogens. However, the evolutionary processes that sculpt antibody repertoires remain poorly understood. Here, using an unbiased repertoire-scale approach, we show that the molecular signatures of evolution are evident in human B cell lineages and reveal how antibodies evolve somatically. We measured the dynamics and genetic diversity of B cell responses of five adults longitudinally before and after influenza vaccination using high-throughput antibody repertoire sequencing. We identified vaccine-responsive B cell lineages that carry signatures of selective sweeps driven by positive selection, and discovered that they often display evidence for selective sweeps favoring multiple subclones. We also found persistent B cell lineages that exhibit stable population dynamics and carry signatures of neutral drift. By exploiting the linkage between B cell fitness and antibody binding affinity, we demonstrated the potential for using signatures of selection to identify antibodies with high binding affinity. This quantitative characterization reveals that antibody repertoires are shaped by an unexpectedly broad spectrum of evolutionary processes and shows how signatures of evolutionary history can be harnessed for antibody discovery and engineering.
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Scooped by Gilbert C FAURE
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Antibodies in the lab: Higher quality through DNA technology - Medical Xpress

Antibodies in the lab: Higher quality through DNA technology - Medical Xpress | Immunology | Scoop.it
More than 100 researchers from around the world have collaborated to craft a request that could fundamentally alter how the antibodies used in research are identified, a project potentially on the scale of the now-completed Human Genome Project.
Gilbert C FAURE's insight:

"We propose that antibodies be defined by their sequences, just as genes are," said Andrew Bradbury, a researcher at Los Alamos National Laboratory, "and they should be made recombinantly in cell lines."

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