Affinity Discrimination in B cells in Response to Membrane Antigen Requires Kinetic Proofreading
Philippos K. Tsourkas, Subhadip Raychaudhuri

TL;DR
This study uses computational modeling to demonstrate that B cell affinity discrimination relies on a kinetic proofreading mechanism requiring a threshold antigen binding time, aligning with experimental observations of B cell activation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a kinetic proofreading model for B cell affinity discrimination, emphasizing the importance of a threshold binding time for effective signaling.
Findings
Longer antigen binding times favor high-affinity BCRs
A ~10 second threshold time reproduces observed affinity discrimination
Signaling strength increases monotonically with affinity when threshold is applied
Abstract
B cells signaling in response to antigen is proportional to antigen affinity, a process known as affinity discrimination. Recent research suggests that B cells can acquire antigen in membrane-bound form on the surface of antigen-presenting cells (APCs), with signaling being initiated within a few seconds of B cell/APC contact. During the earliest stages of B cell/APC contact, B cell receptors (BCRs) on protrusions of the B cell surface bind to antigen on the APC surface and form micro-clusters of 10-100 BCR/Antigen complexes. In this study, we use computational modeling to show that B cell affinity discrimination at the level of BCR-antigen micro-clusters requires a threshold antigen binding time, in a manner similar to kinetic proofreading. We find that if BCR molecules become signaling-capable immediately upon binding antigen, there is a loss in serial engagement due to the increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsT-cell and B-cell Immunology · Immunotherapy and Immune Responses · Immune Cell Function and Interaction
