February 12, 2019

Decoding the variety of human antibodies

At a Glance

  • Researchers genetically sequenced antibodies in people鈥檚 blood and estimated that the body may be able to make up to one quintillion unique antibodies.
  • The findings suggest ways to determine a person鈥檚 infection history, aid with diagnoses, and design personalized vaccines.
Antibodies. Illustration of antibodies, with heavy chains in blue and light chains in white.Svisio / iStock /Thinkstock

The body鈥檚 immune system helps prevent or limit infection. One way the body fights foreign invaders, like bacteria and viruses, is by making antibodies against them. An antibody is a Y-shaped protein that鈥檚 produced by white blood cells. It鈥檚 made of two identical 鈥渁rms,鈥 each of which has a heavy chain and a light chain. Together, these create specificity for an antigen (the substance that鈥檚 causing an immune response).

Two different white blood cells (B cells and T cells) are involved in the body鈥檚 adaptive immune response. This is the specific attack that the body launches against an invader after an initial general immune response, which includes inflammation. B cells make the antibodies that neutralize or kill specific invaders. They also present antigens to T cells. T cells carry out multiple functions, including killing infected cells and activating or recruiting other immune cells to help clear the infection.

In order to adapt to invaders the body has never encountered before, the immune system can generate countless new antibodies. Scientists previously estimated that the human body can make at least a trillion unique antibodies. To explore the actual combination of antibodies people have developed, a team led by Drs. Bryan Briney and Dennis R. Burton at Scripps Research examined antibody-producing B cells isolated from blood samples of 10 people between the ages of 18 and 30. The research was supported in part by NIH鈥檚 最新麻豆视频 Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). Results were published online on January 21, 2019, in Nature.

Using large-scale genetic sequencing technologies and analytical software they developed, the researchers examined nearly 3 billion antibody heavy-chain sequences. Based on their findings, they estimated that the human antibody repertoire is much greater than previously thought鈥攚ith the potential for the body to make a quintillion, or one million trillion, unique antibodies.

The team grouped the antibodies into 鈥渃lonotypes鈥 based on the similarities of the genes that make up the heavy chain. They found that any two people shared an average of 0.95% clonotypes, and that 0.022% of the clonotypes were shared between all of the individuals. While this might seem low, it鈥檚 much higher than suggested by chance. These findings suggest that while there鈥檚 great diversity amongst people鈥檚 collection of antibodies, there are some types that most people likely share.

鈥淎ntibody repertoire information could soon be used to diagnose autoimmune diseases and chronic infections, for example, or to design vaccines,鈥 Briney says. 鈥淕etting clinically relevant insights from this kind of information would be a big step forward, and we鈥檙e hoping soon to do that.鈥

Additional studies are needed to more accurately determine the full scope of the human antibody repertoire. This sequencing was limited to a small portion of the B cell population in a small number of people.

鈥攂y Tianna Hicklin, Ph.D.

Related Links

References:  Briney B, Inderbitzin A, Joyce C, Burton DR. Nature. 2019 Jan 21. doi: 10.1038/s41586-019-0879-y. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 30664748.

Funding: 最新麻豆视频 Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID); Center for Viral Systems Biology; International AIDS Vaccine Initiative through the Neutralizing Antibody Consortium; and the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard.