Monoclonal IgG as antigens: reduction is an early intracellular event of their processing by antigen-presenting cells

1996 
: Murine mAb injected into patients behave as exogenous antigens and trigger a specific immune response characterized mainly by CD4+ T lymphocytes. They are recognized by T cells under a processed form and in a MHC class II-restricted fashion. IgG degradation which occurs in antigen-presenting cells (APC) has been studied in vitro. We have shown that partial reduction of this antigen is an early event which is significant for the generation of class II-restricted fragments presentable to antigen-specific T cells. Two different murine mAb were used as antigens and human monocytic U937 or antigen non-specific Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B cells as APC. Upon cellular internalization IgG are rapidly cleaved leading to 24-25 kDa fragments. One of the major and early events corresponds to partial reduction of IgG--the light chain is released from the intact molecule, heavy chains remaining bound together. Partial in vitro reduction of IgG followed by presentation by fixed B cells to specific T cells showed that only kappa light chain-specific T cell clones are stimulated, in contrast to heavy chain-specific T cell clones. The response to the kappa chains of specific T cells points to a significant role played by the early IgG partial reduction in the generation of kappa light chain class II binding fragments.
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