Theory of Equilibrium Binding of a Bivalent Ligand to Cell Surface Antibody: the Effect of Antibody Heterogeneity on Cross-linking
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We investigate the equilibrium binding of symmetric bivalent ligands to a heterogeneous population of symmetric bivalent cell surface receptors. The receptors are heterogeneous in their binding affinities (equilibrium binding constants) for the ligand. For any distribution of receptor binding affinities we show how to calculate the total concentration of receptors that are cross-linked by the ligand, i.e., the concentration of cell surface aggregates composed of two or more receptors, as well as the concentration of any given aggregate. We show that certain qualitative properties of cross-linking which hold for homogeneous antibody populations fail to hold in the heterogeneous case. We use our results to interpret certain in vitro experiments in which synthetic bivalent haptens are used to trigger histamine release from basophils which have on their surface antibody specific for the hapten.
Specific cellular stimulation in the primary immune response: a quantized model.
Vogelstein B, Dintzis R, Dintzis H Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1982; 79(2):395-9.
PMID: 6952192 PMC: 345749. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.79.2.395.