scholarly journals B cell–deficient NOD.H-2h4 mice have CD4+CD25+ T regulatory cells that inhibit the development of spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis

2006 ◽  
Vol 203 (2) ◽  
pp. 349-358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiguang Yu ◽  
Prasanta K. Maiti ◽  
Melissa Dyson ◽  
Renu Jain ◽  
Helen Braley-Mullen

Wild-type (WT) NOD.H-2h4 mice develop spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis (SAT) when given 0.05% NaI in their drinking water, whereas B cell–deficient NOD.H-2h4 mice are SAT resistant. To test the hypothesis that resistance of B cell–deficient mice to SAT was due to the activity of regulatory CD4+CD25+ T (T reg) cells activated if autoantigen was initially presented on non–B cells, CD25+ T reg cells were transiently depleted in vivo using anti-CD25. B cell–deficient NOD.H-2h4 mice given three weekly injections of anti-CD25 developed SAT 8 wk after NaI water. Thyroid lesions were similar to those in WT mice except there were no B cells in thyroid infiltrates. WT and B cell–deficient mice had similar numbers of CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ cells. Mice with transgenic nitrophenyl-specific B cells unable to secrete immunoglobulin were also resistant to SAT, and transient depletion of T reg cells resulted in severe SAT with both T and B cells in thyroid infiltrates. T reg cells that inhibit SAT were eliminated by day 3 thymectomy, indicating they belong to the subset of naturally occurring T reg cells. However, T reg cell depletion did not increase SAT severity in WT mice, suggesting that T reg cells may be nonfunctional when effector T cells are activated; i.e., by autoantigen-presenting B cells.

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 135-135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaobin B. Zhao ◽  
Joshi Trupti ◽  
Rosa Lapalombella ◽  
Carolyn Cheney ◽  
Aruna Gowda ◽  
...  

Abstract CD37 is a lineage-specific B-cell antigen that represents an attractive target for immunotherapy in B-cell malignancies, especially in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). CD37-specific small modular immuno pharmaceutical (CD37-SMIP™) drug is an engineered protein therapeutic directed to the CD37 antigen using a single chain variable region (scFv) linked to a modified human IgG1 hinge, CH2, and CH3 domains. We have previously presented that CD37-SMIP™ drug induces both ADCC and apoptosis against primary CLL cells and B-cell lymphoma cells and therapeutic efficacy was observed in a Raji cell disseminated leukemia xenograft model. Herein, we sought to determine the effector cell type(s) mediating ADCC and explore if agents that deplete NK cell inhibitory T-regulatory cells influence CD37-SMIP™ efficacy. Immunostaining of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from CLL patients demonstrated no expression of CD37 on CD3+ T cells, CD16+ or CD56+ NK cells, or CD64+ monocytes whereas CD37 was highly expressed on CD19+ B cells. Using purified human PBMCs as effector cells and Cr-51 labelled CLL B cells as targets, we found the CD37-SMIP™ dependent ADCC was predominantly mediated by NK cells, but not naïve or activated monocytes. Consistent with these in-vitro results, the in-vivo therapeutic efficacy of CD37-SMIP™ drug was significantly compromised by depletion of NK cells in the Raji cell disseminated leukemia xenograft SCID mouse model. The median survival time of CD37-SMIP™ treated mice decreased from 51 days (95% CI: 38, 78) to 27 days (95% CI: 25, 37) (p=0.017) with the depletion of NK cells. Consistent with previous studies, ADCC is not diminished by fludarabine, an agent that may deplete T-regulatory cells, suggesting that the anti-CD37 protein and fludarabine might combine for increased efficacy in-vivo. We therefore examined the effect of fludarabine on CD37-SMIP™ in-vitro apoptotic activity. These data demonstrate that direct cell death mediated by CD37-SMIP™ drug (5 ug/mL) synergizes with fludarabine-induced caspase-dependent apoptosis, as measured by both the MTT assay and annexin V/PI staining of CLL cells (combination index, CI=0.44). Overall, these data suggest that the CD37-SMIP™ is a promising therapeutic agent against CD37+ B-cell malignancies as either monotherapy or in combination with fludarabine. Further clinical development is warranted to investigate the effect of CD37-SMIP™ drug in CLL and NHL. (SMIP trademark is owned by Trubion Pharmaceuticals).


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (9) ◽  
pp. 5118-5126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda F. van Dyk ◽  
Herbert W. Virgin ◽  
Samuel H. Speck

ABSTRACT Gammaherpesviruses establish a life-long chronic infection that is tightly controlled by the host immune response. We previously demonstrated that viruses lacking the gammaherpesvirus 68 (γHV68) viral cyclin (v-cyclin) exhibited a severe defect in reactivation from latency and persistent replication. In this analysis of chronic infection, we demonstrate that the v-cyclin is required for γHV68-associated mortality in B-cell-deficient mice. Furthermore, we identify the v-cyclin as the first gene product required for maintenance of gammaherpesvirus latency in vivo in the absence of B lymphocytes. While the v-cyclin was necessary for maintenance of latency in the absence of B cells, maintenance of v-cyclin-deficient viruses was equivalent to that of wild-type γHV68 in the presence of B cells. These results support a model in which maintenance of chronic γHV68 infection requires v-cyclin-dependent reactivation and reseeding of non-B-cell latency reservoirs in the absence of B cells and raise the possibility that B cells represent a long-lived latency reservoir maintained independently of reactivation. These results highlight distinct mechanisms for the maintenance of chronic infection in immunocompetent and B-cell-deficient mice and suggest that the different latency reservoirs have distinct gene requirements for the maintenance of latency.


2011 ◽  
Vol 71 (8) ◽  
pp. 2871-2881 ◽  
Author(s):  
James C. Lee ◽  
Erik Hayman ◽  
Hollie J. Pegram ◽  
Elmer Santos ◽  
Glenn Heller ◽  
...  

Pharmaceutics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cornelia Barnowski ◽  
Nicole Kadzioch ◽  
Dominik Damm ◽  
Huimin Yan ◽  
Vladimir Temchura

The great advantage of virus-like particle (VLP) nano-vaccines is their structural identity to wild-type viruses, ensuring that antigen-specific B-cells encounter viral proteins in their natural conformation. “Wild-type” viral nanoparticles can be further genetically or biochemically functionalized with biomolecules (antigens and adjuvants). Flagellin is a potent inducer of innate immunity and it has demonstrated adjuvant effectiveness due to its affinity for toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5). In contrast to most TLR ligands, flagellin is a protein and can induce an immune response against itself. To avoid side-effects, we incorporated a less inflammatory and less immunogenic form of flagellin as an adjuvant into HIV-based nanoparticle B-cell-targeting vaccines that display either the HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) or a model antigen, hen egg lysozyme (HEL). While flagellin significantly enhanced HEL-specific IgG responses, anti-Env antibody responses were suppressed. We demonstrated that flagellin did not activate B-cells directly in vitro, but might compete for CD4+ T-cell help in vivo. Therefore, we hypothesize that in the context of VLP-based B-cell nano-vaccines, flagellin serves as an antigen itself and may outcompete a less immunogenic antigen with its antibody response. In contrast, in combination with a strong immunogen, the adjuvant activity of flagellin may dominate over its immunogenicity.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 115-115
Author(s):  
Andrew A. Lane ◽  
Diederik van Bodegom ◽  
Bjoern Chapuy ◽  
Gabriela Alexe ◽  
Timothy J Sullivan ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 115 Extra copies of chromosome 21 (polysomy 21) is the most common somatic aneuploidy in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), including >90% of cases with high hyperdiploidy. In addition, children with Down syndrome (DS) have a 20-fold increased risk of developing B-ALL, of which ∼60% harbor CRLF2 rearrangements. To examine these associations within genetically defined models, we investigated B-lineage phenotypes in Ts1Rhr mice, which harbor triplication of 31 genes syntenic with the DS critical region (DSCR) on human chr.21. Murine pro-B cell (B220+CD43+) development proceeds sequentially through “Hardy fractions” defined by cell surface phenotype: A (CD24−BP-1−), B (CD24+BP-1−) and then C (CD24+BP-1+). Compared with otherwise isogenic wild-type littermates, Ts1Rhr bone marrow harbored decreased percentages of Hardy fraction B and C cells, indicating that DSCR triplication is sufficient to disrupt the Hardy A-to-B transition. Of note, the same phenotype was reported in human DS fetal liver B-cells, which have a block between the pre-pro- and pro-B cell stages (analogous to Hardy A-to-B). To determine whether DSCR triplication affects B-cell proliferation in vitro, we analyzed colony formation and serial replating in methylcellulose cultures. Ts1Rhr bone marrow (B6/FVB background) formed 2–3-fold more B-cell colonies in early passages compared to bone marrow from wild-type littermates. While wild-type B-cells could not serially replate beyond 4 passages, Ts1Rhr B-cells displayed indefinite serial replating (>10 passages). Ts1Rhr mice do not spontaneously develop leukemia, so we utilized two mouse models to determine whether DSCR triplication cooperates with leukemogenic oncogenes in vivo. First, we generated Eμ-CRLF2 F232C mice, which express the constitutively active CRLF2 mutant solely within B-cells. Like Ts1Rhr B-cells, (but not CRLF2 F232C B-cells) Ts1Rhr/CRLF2 F232C cells had indefinite serial replating potential. In contrast with Ts1Rhr B-cells, Ts1Rhr/CRLF2 F232C B-cells also engrafted into NOD.Scid.IL2Rγ−/− mice and caused fatal and serially transplantable B-ALL. Second, we retrovirally transduced BCR-ABL1 into unselected bone marrow from wild-type and Ts1Rhr mice and transplanted into irradiated wild-type recipients. Transplantation of transduced Ts1Rhr cells (106, 105, or 104) caused fatal B-ALL in recipient mice with shorter latency and increased penetrance compared to recipients of the same number of transduced wild-type cells. By Poisson calculation, the number of B-ALL initiating cells in transduced Ts1Rhr bone marrow was ∼4-fold higher than in wild-type animals (1:60 vs 1:244, P=0.0107). Strikingly, transplantation of individual Hardy A, B, and C fractions after sorting and BCR-ABL1 transduction demonstrated that the increased leukemia-initiating capacity almost completely resides in the Ts1Rhr Hardy B fraction; i.e., the same subset suppressed during Ts1Rhr B-cell differentiation. To define transcriptional determinants of these phenotypes, we performed RNAseq of Ts1Rhr and wild-type B cells in methylcellulose culture (n=3 biologic replicates per genotype). As expected, Ts1Rhr colonies had ∼1.5-fold higher RNA abundance of expressed DSCR genes. We defined a Ts1Rhr signature of the top 200 genes (false discovery rate (FDR) <0.25) differentially expressed compared with wild-type cells. Importantly, this Ts1Rhr signature was significantly enriched (P=0.02) in a published gene expression dataset of DS-ALL compared with non-DS-ALL (Hertzberg et al., Blood 2009). Query of >2,300 signatures in the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB) C2 Chemical and Genetic Perturbations with the Ts1Rhr signature identified enrichment in multiple gene sets of polycomb repressor complex (PRC2) targets and H3K27 trimethylation. Most notably, SUZ12 targets within human embryonic stem cells were more highly expressed in Ts1Rhr cells (P=1.2×10−6, FDR=0.003) and the same SUZ12 signature was enriched in patients with DS-ALL compared to non-DS-ALL (P=0.007). In summary, DSCR triplication directly suppresses precursor B-cell differentiation and promotes B-cell transformation both in vitro and by cooperating with proliferative alterations such as CRLF2 activation and BCR-ABL1 in vivo. Pharmacologic modulation of H3K27me3 effectors may overcome the pro-leukemogenic effects of polysomy 21. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2396-2396
Author(s):  
Yongwei Zheng ◽  
Alexander W Wang ◽  
Mei Yu ◽  
Anand Padmanabhan ◽  
Benjamin E Tourdot ◽  
...  

Abstract Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an immune-mediated disorder that can cause fatal arterial or venous thrombosis/thromboembolism. Immune complexes consisting of heparin, platelet factor 4 (PF4) and PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies are central to the pathogenesis of HIT. However, heparin, a glycosoaminoglycan, and PF4 are normal body constituents and it is as yet unclear what triggers the initial induction of pathogenic antibodies. Here we described detection of B cells among peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from each of 9 healthy adults that produced PF4/heparin-specific IgM antibodies following in vitro stimulation with ubiquitous pro-inflammatory molecules containing unmethylated CpG dinucleotides derived from bacterial and viral DNA. PF4/heparin-specific IgM-generating B cells were present at a frequency of at least 0.03 to 1 per thousand B cells present in the PBMC population. Similarly, splenic B cells isolated from unmanipulated wild-type mice consistently produced PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies following in vitro stimulation with CpG. In addition, wild-type mice produced PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies upon in vivo challenge with CpG whereas unchallenged wild-type mice did not. These findings demonstrate that both humans and mice possess pre-existing, inactive and tolerant PF4/heparin-specific B cells. We suggest that tolerance can be broken by a strong inflammatory stimulus, leading to activation of these B cells and production of antibodies that recognize PF4/heparin in vitro and in vivo. Consistent with this concept, mice lacking protein kinase Cd (PKCd), a signaling molecule of the B-cell survival factor BAFF (B-cell activation factor), that are known to have breakdown of B-cell tolerance to self-antigens, spontaneously produced anti-PF4/heparin antibodies in the absence of an inflammatory stimulus. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that breakdown of tolerance can lead to PF4/heparin-specific antibody production and that B-cell tolerance plays an important role in HIT pathogenesis. Disclosures: White II: Bayer: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; CSL-Behring: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; NIH: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Asklepios: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Wyeth: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Entegrion: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Biogen: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Baxter: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 594-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaiza Diaz-de-Durana ◽  
George T. Mantchev ◽  
Richard J. Bram ◽  
Alessandra Franco

AbstractWe demonstrated that B-cell–dendritic cell (DC) interactions via transmembrane activator and calcium modulator and cyclophilin ligand (CAML) interactor (TACI) and B-lymphocyte stimulator (BLyS) provide an early signal critical to generate adequate numbers of mature antigen presenting cells (APCs) to prime naive CD8+ T cells (CTLs) in vivo. Evidence that B cells are required for efficient CTL generation in mice and that reconstitution with wild-type but not TACI-knockout B cells restored normal CTL responses support our conclusion. Moreover, low doses of a TACI fusion protein (TACI-Fc) that express the extracellular domain of TACI (amino acid [aa] 1-126) restored CTL priming in B-cell–deficient mice in vivo and induced DC maturation in vitro. In fact, following interactions with B cells, splenic DCs rapidly express the CD86 costimulatory molecule, to an extent comparable to the exposure to antigenic stimuli. BLyShigh peptide-pulsed bone marrow–derived DCs, used as vaccines in vivo, cannot generate CTLs in B-cell–deficient and TACI-deficient mice, strongly supporting a need for B-cell–DC cooperation through TACI-BLyS during CTL first encounter with antigens in vivo.


2000 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 2431-2434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Inger Gjertsson ◽  
Olof Hörnquist Hultgren ◽  
Martin Stenson ◽  
Rikard Holmdahl ◽  
Andrzej Tarkowski

ABSTRACT To investigate the role of B cells in experimental, superantigen-mediated Staphylococcus aureus arthritis and sepsis, we used gene-targeted B-cell-deficient mice. The mice were inoculated intravenously with a toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1)-producing S. aureus strain. The B-cell-deficient and thus agamma-globulinemic mice showed striking similarities to the wild-type control animals with respect to the development of arthritis, the mortality rate, and the rate of bacterial clearance. Surprisingly, we found that the levels of gamma interferon in serum were significantly lower (P < 0.0001) in B-cell-deficient mice than in the controls, possibly due to impaired superantigen presentation and a diminished expression of costimulatory molecules. In contrast, the levels of interleukin-4 (IL-4), IL-6, and IL-10 in serum were equal in both groups. Our findings demonstrate that neither mature B cells nor their products significantly contribute to the course ofS. aureus-induced septic arthritis.


2013 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 2112-2122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoquan Zhang ◽  
Ying Peng ◽  
Laura Schoenlaub ◽  
Alexandra Elliott ◽  
William Mitchell ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTo further understand the mechanisms of formalin-inactivatedCoxiella burnetiiphase I (PI) vaccine (PIV)-induced protection, we examined if B cell, T cell, CD4+T cell, or CD8+T cell deficiency in mice significantly affects the ability of PIV to confer protection against aC. burnetiiinfection. Interestingly, compared to wild-type (WT) mice, PIV conferred comparable levels of protection in CD4+T cell- or CD8+T cell-deficient mice and partial protection in T cell-deficient mice but did not provide measurable protection in B cell-deficient mice. These results suggest that PIV-induced protection depends on B cells. In addition, anti-PI-specific IgM was the major detectable antibody (Ab) in immune sera from PIV-vaccinated CD4+T cell-deficient mice, and passive transfer of immune sera from PIV-vaccinated CD4+T cell-deficient mice conferred significant protection. These results suggest that T cell-independent anti-PI-specific IgM may contribute to PIV-induced protection. Our results also suggested that PIV-induced protection may not depend on complement activation and Fc receptor-mediated effector functions. Furthermore, our results demonstrated that both IgM and IgG from PIV-vaccinated WT mouse sera were able to inhibitC. burnetiiinfectionin vivo, but only IgM from PIV-vaccinated CD4+T cell-deficient mouse sera inhibitedC. burnetiiinfection. Collectively, these findings suggest that PIV-induced protection depends on B cells to produce protective IgM and IgG and that T cell-independent anti-PI-specific IgM may play a critical role in PIV-induced protection againstC. burnetiiinfection.


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