- Yeung, Yik Andy;
- Foletti, Davide;
- Deng, Xiaodi;
- Abdiche, Yasmina;
- Strop, Pavel;
- Glanville, Jacob;
- Pitts, Steven;
- Lindquist, Kevin;
- Sundar, Purnima D;
- Sirota, Marina;
- Hasa-Moreno, Adela;
- Pham, Amber;
- Melton Witt, Jody;
- Ni, Irene;
- Pons, Jaume;
- Shelton, David;
- Rajpal, Arvind;
- Chaparro-Riggers, Javier
Staphylococcus aureus is both an important pathogen and a human commensal. To explore this ambivalent relationship between host and microbe, we analysed the memory humoral response against IsdB, a protein involved in iron acquisition, in four healthy donors. Here we show that in all donors a heavily biased use of two immunoglobulin heavy chain germlines generated high affinity (pM) antibodies that neutralize the two IsdB NEAT domains, IGHV4-39 for NEAT1 and IGHV1-69 for NEAT2. In contrast to the typical antibody/antigen interactions, the binding is primarily driven by the germline-encoded hydrophobic CDRH-2 motifs of IGHV1-69 and IGHV4-39, with a binding mechanism nearly identical for each antibody derived from different donors. Our results suggest that IGHV1-69 and IGHV4-39, while part of the adaptive immune system, may have evolved under selection pressure to encode a binding motif innately capable of recognizing and neutralizing a structurally conserved protein domain involved in pathogen iron acquisition.