Publication | Open Access
B Cells Use Mechanical Energy to Discriminate Antigen Affinities
313
Citations
31
References
2013
Year
Myosin Iia ContractionsB Cell ContractilityMedicineAdaptive Immune SystemHumoral ResponseImmunologyB CellsImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingAutoimmunityCytoskeletonAntibody EngineeringHumoral ImmunityImmunotherapyDiscriminate Antigen AffinitiesCell BiologyImmune Cell Activation
The generation of high-affinity antibodies depends on the ability of B cells to extract antigens from the surfaces of antigen-presenting cells. B cells that express high-affinity B cell receptors (BCRs) acquire more antigen and obtain better T cell help. However, the mechanisms by which B cells extract antigen remain unclear. Using fluid and flexible membrane substrates to mimic antigen-presenting cells, we showed that B cells acquire antigen by dynamic myosin IIa-mediated contractions that pull out and invaginate the presenting membranes. The forces generated by myosin IIa contractions ruptured most individual BCR-antigen bonds and promoted internalization of only high-affinity, multivalent BCR microclusters. Thus, B cell contractility contributes to affinity discrimination by mechanically testing the strength of antigen binding.
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