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Gut has a backup system for IgA antibodies — two white plastic bottles on white table

Gut has a backup system for IgA antibodiesCEFR B1

18 Dec 2025

Adapted from Yale, Futurity CC BY 4.0

Photo by Adrià Crehuet Cano, Unsplash

Level B1 – Intermediate
3 min
157 words

Researchers examined how the gut produces immunoglobulin A (IgA), the antibody that forms a mucosal barrier in the intestine. They traced B cell responses in mice after immunization to see which cellular routes make IgA.

Normally, naïve B cells (IgM) enter germinal centers, where they mature, mutate and class-switch once into IgG, IgE or IgA. The team found that most IgA present in the first three weeks after immunization did not come from germinal centers. Germinal center-derived IgA became detectable between weeks three and six.

Unexpectedly, non-germinal center IgA and germinal center IgA had similar antigen specificity and similar numbers of mutations. The researchers also reconstructed evolutionary relationships and saw that IgA and IgG often shared close recent ancestors, suggesting a sequential switch from IgM to IgG and then to IgA. The pattern appeared in both mice and humans, and the finding suggests redundancy in gut immunity and possible implications for mucosal vaccine design.

Difficult words

  • immunoglobulinprotein antibody that defends the body
    immunoglobulin A
  • mucosalrelated to the moist lining inside the body
  • germinal centerarea in lymph tissue where B cells mature
    germinal centers, germinal center IgA
  • naivenot yet activated or experienced immune cell
    naïve
  • class-switchprocess that changes an antibody's class type
  • antigensubstance that triggers an immune response
  • redundancyextra or duplicate protection in a biological system

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