
Somatic hypermutation is an amazing process which increases the diversity of the antibody response and can also lead to an increase in antibody affinity over time. As we noted in lecture, the human body has the potential to make 10 billion different antibodies from just a few gene regions and somatic hypermutation helps increase this diversity.
Somatic hypermutation is a process which essentially involves specific but semi-random mutation events which are focused only on a small region of the antibody genes. The small region just happens to be the binding site of antibodies for foreign antigens.
Mutations at large in the genome are often deleterious, yet somatic hypermutation and a process of selection leads to positive benefit for the host. Thus, from a design perspective we cannot say that all mutations or natural selection processes are neutral or bad or deleterious.
But from a design perspective, why use a mutation process to increase antibody diversity and affinity?
What are some of the advantages involved in using a mutation system to increase immune function in this way?
Due Nov 24

Research on an AIDS vaccine has been ongoing for years. Very few positive results have been achieved. More recently the focus has been on broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs). Broadly neutralizing antibodies show up naturally in a person infected with HIV only later in the infection. These antibodies have been shown to be effective in neutralizing the HIV virus but only if they appear early in HIV infection.
