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Shape space coverage with distance-dependent matching
The concept of a shape space was introduced by Perelson and Oster (1979).
Since then, it has been used in numerous theoretical studies of the
immune system, of which I will only mention a few
(). In this
framework, it is postulated that molecular interactions can be
understood in terms of the "shape" of the molecules. The crucial
assumption of this model is that the "shape" of a molecule can be
represented by a vector of discrete values, from a finite, generally
small, alphabet. Rules are specified for determining the "affinity"
between two such "shapes". There have been attempts to relate this
model to measurements that can be obtained in biological systems
As (). I therefore decided to use this
conceptualization for my study on the evolution of antibody gene
libraries.
It is generally assumed that the number of pathogens in the
environment of a species is very large. Indeed, if this number was
small, the immune system would be able to distribute its resources,
such as antibody molecules, among these pathogens. Each of the
pathogens would raise an effective immune response. This is clearly
not what we observe in reality. Therefore, I will assume that the
pathogen universe is large. One has to keep in mind, though, that the
failure of the immune system to cope with all the pathogenic
challenges that it encounters may be due to other factors. Pathogen
evolution sets a moving target for the immune system. As I will show
in the following section, the rate at which the antibody library
adapts to an evolving pathogenic environment might be too slow for the
immune system to ever pin down even a small pathogen set.
Let us assume that the number of antibody shapes encoded in the genome
is considerably smaller than the number of antigen shapes that the
organism encounters during its life time. To understand the role of
the antibody gene libraries in the generation of the immune
repertoire, I will address the following questions:
- How does the survival probability of the organism scale with
the size of its immune receptor repertoire?
- What structure do antibody libraries evolve in different types
of pathogenic environments?
- Can an antibody repertoire that has been selected for
interaction with pathogens perform equally well in the interaction
with non-pathogenic antigens?
Next: Model
Up: How much can germline
Previous: How much can germline
Mihaela Oprea
1999-04-11