Structural aspects of cross-reactivity and its relation toantibody affinity |
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Authors: | Rob C. Aalberse Ilona Kleine Budde Steven O. Stapel Ronald van Ree |
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Affiliation: | CLB and the Laboratory for Experimental and Clinical Immunology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam |
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Abstract: | In the context of IgE/allergen interactions, affinity is largely determined by the stability of the allergen-IgE complex: a low affinity is usually equated with a rapid dissociation of the complex. Regular solid-phase assays are not well suited for affinity estimates because of multivalency effects, unstirred layer effects and invisible antibodies. Elution of IgE bound to solid-phase coupled allergen might be a good measure of intrinsic affinity, provided that reassociation of antibodies is prevented by a high concentration of soluble allergen. Allergen-mediated IgE-dependent triggering of a mast cell is presumably a two-step process. During the first step, the allergen is bound to a cell-bound IgE antibody and dragged over the cell surface. The second step is the interaction between this cell-bound allergen and another IgE antibody. The hypothesis is that the affinity requirements for the first step are higher than for the second. The implication is that a mast cell can be triggered by a single high-affinity antibody in combination with one or more low-affinity antibodies. |
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Keywords: | allergen structure cross-reactivity avidity unstirred layer mast cell triggering |
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