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Comparative Study
. 1984 Dec 1;3(12):3005-12.
doi: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1984.tb02247.x.

Molecular basis of an isogeneic anti-idiotypic response

Comparative Study

Molecular basis of an isogeneic anti-idiotypic response

F Sablitzky et al. EMBO J. .

Abstract

The nucleotide sequences of the variable region genes expressed in the heavy and light chains of six isogeneic anti-idiotope antibodies recognizing idiotopes on two closely related antibodies with specificity for the hapten (4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl)acetyl (NP) were determined. In two independently derived anti-idiotope cell lines the same or strongly homologous V kappa, VH and D region genes had originally been rearranged. The two lines express long and partly homologous N sequences (presumed to be not of germ line origin) at the border of D, resulting in CDR3s of unusual length. An unusually long CDR3, partly encoded by N sequences, is also present in the heavy chain of a third anti-idiotope antibody. The VH regions of the three remaining anti-idiotope antibodies originate from a single VH gene which belongs to the same VH group as the VH genes expressed in the other anti-idiotopes. Two of these antibodies, expressing similar V, D and J elements, had been isolated from the same mouse and appear to have diverged from the same B cell precursor by at least two rounds of somatic mutation. Somatic point mutations have occurred in most, if not all anti-idiotope V region sequences. In two instances somatic mutations in J increase the structural homology between anti-idiotopes. The anti-idiotypic response in this system is thus genetically restricted and may depend upon the selection of non-germ line sequences, suggesting an explanation for the low frequency at which anti-idiotope antibodies are expressed in this system.

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