De Lerma Barbaro Andrea, Balkhi Sahar, Giovannardi Stefano, Vianelli Alberto, Ribatti Domenico, Mortara Lorenzo
Department of Biotechnology and Life Sciences, Laboratory of Comparative Physiopathology, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy.
Department of Biotechnology and Life Sciences, Immunology and General Pathology Laboratory, University of Insubria, Varese, Italy.
Int J Immunogenet. 2025 Jun;52(3):125-134. doi: 10.1111/iji.12712. Epub 2025 May 8.
The diversity of antibody molecules has for decades been an unsolved enigma that has attracted wide interest among biologists. Parallel to the accumulation of experimental evidence, progress in antibody research was also driven by the theoretical debate that played a particularly prominent role, at least until the entry of molecular biology into this field of investigation. Several publications have examined this topic from a historical perspective. In this article, we aim to examine the history of research into the mechanisms underlying antibody diversity from a partly new standpoint. In jawed vertebrates (gnathostomes), progressively more distant on the evolutionary scale from humans and mice-in non-model mammals, birds, amphibians, bony and cartilaginous fish-certain mechanisms for the diversity of acquired immunity receptors (B-cell receptors [BCR]/immunoglobulins [Ig] and T-cell receptors [TCR]) have been described that are quite unexpected on the basis of what has emerged from biomedical immunology studies. What is more, in Agnatha vertebrates, in several invertebrate phyla and even in bacteria, forms of adaptive immunity have been discovered, based on the ability to finely tune the host defence response to the infectious threats. These defence systems show some similarities with the acquired immunity of jawed vertebrates, although they are based on mechanisms and receptors totally different from BCR/Ig and TCR. Therefore, our aim is to investigate how the theoretical debate on antibody diversity, which developed in the 20th century, partly anticipated some of the central themes in the current research on adaptive immunity systems discovered in the previously mentioned non-model systems. With this aim, we have reformulated, in the language of modern biology, some of the hypotheses advanced in the first decades of antibody diversity research.
几十年来,抗体分子的多样性一直是一个未解之谜,吸引了生物学家的广泛关注。与实验证据的积累并行,抗体研究的进展也受到理论争论的推动,至少在分子生物学进入这一研究领域之前,该争论发挥了特别突出的作用。有几篇出版物从历史角度审视了这个话题。在本文中,我们旨在从一个部分新颖的角度审视抗体多样性潜在机制的研究历史。在有颌脊椎动物(gnathostomes)中,从进化尺度来看,它们与人类和小鼠的亲缘关系越来越远——在非模式哺乳动物、鸟类、两栖动物、硬骨鱼和软骨鱼中——已经描述了一些获得性免疫受体(B细胞受体[BCR]/免疫球蛋白[Ig]和T细胞受体[TCR])多样性的机制,这些机制基于生物医学免疫学研究的结果是相当出乎意料的。此外,在无颌脊椎动物、几个无脊椎动物门甚至细菌中,基于对宿主防御反应进行精细调节以应对感染威胁的能力,发现了适应性免疫的形式。这些防御系统与有颌脊椎动物的获得性免疫有一些相似之处,尽管它们基于与BCR/Ig和TCR完全不同的机制和受体。因此,我们的目的是研究20世纪发展起来的关于抗体多样性的理论争论如何部分地预见了当前在上述非模式系统中发现的适应性免疫系统研究的一些核心主题。为此,我们用现代生物学的语言重新阐述了抗体多样性研究最初几十年提出的一些假设。