Abstract

Antibodies can initiate lung injury in a variety of disease states such as autoimmunity, transfusion reactions, or after organ transplantation, but the key factors determining in vivo pathogenicity of injury-inducing antibodies are unclear. A previously overlooked step in complement activation by IgG antibodies has been elucidated involving interactions between IgG Fc domains that enable assembly of IgG hexamers, which can optimally activate the complement cascade. Here, we tested the in vivo relevance of IgG hexamers in a complement-dependent alloantibody model of acute lung injury. We used three approaches to block alloantibody hexamerization (antibody carbamylation, the K439E Fc mutation, or treatment with domain B from Staphylococcal protein A), all of which reduced acute lung injury. Conversely, Fc mutations promoting spontaneous hexamerization made a harmful alloantibody into a more potent inducer of acute lung injury and rendered an innocuous alloantibody pathogenic. Treatment with a recombinant Fc hexamer "decoy" therapeutic protected mice from lung injury, including in a model with transgenic human FCGR2A expression that exacerbated pathology. These results indicate a direct in vivo role of IgG hexamerization in initiating acute lung injury and the potential for therapeutics that inhibit or mimic hexamerization to treat antibody-mediated diseases.

Competing Interest Statement

RS is an employee of CSL Behring AG, Switzerland. The authors have no additional conflicts of interest.

Details

Title
IgG hexamers initiate acute lung injury
Author
Cleary, Simon J; Seo, Yurim; Tian, Jennifer J; Kwaan, Nicholas; Bulkley, David P; Arthur Eh Bentlage; Vidarsson, Gestur; Boilard, Eric; Spirig, Rolf; Zimring, James C; Looney, Mark R
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2024
Publication date
Jan 27, 2024
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2918813588
Copyright
© 2024. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (“the License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.