Abs specific for phosphorylcholine (PC) are known to contribute to the immune defense against a variety of microbial infections. To assess for other types of binding interactions, we performed surveys of anti-PC Abs of diverse biologic origins and structural diversity and demonstrated a common autoreactivity for oxidatively modified low density lipoprotein and other oxidation-specific structures containing PC-Ags. We also found that cells undergoing apoptosis sequentially express a range of oxidation-specific neo-self PC determinants. Whereas natural Abs to PC recognized cells at early stages of apoptosis, by contrast, an IgG anti-PC Ab, representative of a T cell-dependent response, recognized PC determinants primarily associated with late stages of apoptosis. Cumulatively, these results demonstrate a fundamental paradigm in which Abs from both the innate and the T cell-dependent tiers of the B cell compartment recognize a minimal molecular motif arrayed both on microbes and as neo-self Ags linked to atherosclerosis and autoimmune disease.
CITATION STYLE
Shaw, P. X., Goodyear, C. S., Chang, M.-K., Witztum, J. L., & Silverman, G. J. (2003). The Autoreactivity of Anti-Phosphorylcholine Antibodies for Atherosclerosis-Associated Neo-Antigens and Apoptotic Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 170(12), 6151–6157. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.170.12.6151
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