scholarly journals The Multifaceted Roles of B Cells in the Thymus: From Immune Tolerance to Autoimmunity

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justine Castañeda ◽  
Yessia Hidalgo ◽  
Daniela Sauma ◽  
Mario Rosemblatt ◽  
María Rosa Bono ◽  
...  

The thymus is home to a significant number of resident B cells which possess several unique characteristics regarding their origin, phenotype and function. Evidence shows that they originate both from precursors that mature intrathymically and as the entry of recirculating mature B cells. Under steady-state conditions they exhibit hallmark signatures of activated B cells, undergo immunoglobulin class-switch, and express the Aire transcription factor. These features are imprinted within the thymus and enable B cells to act as specialized antigen-presenting cells in the thymic medulla that contribute negative selection of self-reactive T cells. Though, most studies have focused on B cells located in the medulla, a second contingent of B cells is also present in non-epithelial perivascular spaces of the thymus. This latter group of B cells, which includes memory B cells and plasma cells, is not readily detected in the thymus of infants or young mice but gradually accumulates during normal aging. Remarkably, in many autoimmune diseases the thymus suffers severe structural atrophy and infiltration of B cells in the perivascular spaces, which organize into follicles similar to those typically found in secondary lymphoid organs. This review provides an overview of the pathways involved in thymic B cell origin and presents an integrated view of both thymic medullary and perivascular B cells and their respective physiological and pathological roles in central tolerance and autoimmune diseases.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayashree Srinivasan ◽  
Jessica N. Lancaster ◽  
Nandini Singarapu ◽  
Laura P. Hale ◽  
Lauren I. R. Ehrlich ◽  
...  

Thymic epithelial cells (TECs) and hematopoietic antigen presenting cells (HAPCs) in the thymus microenvironment provide essential signals to self-reactive thymocytes that induce either negative selection or generation of regulatory T cells (Treg), both of which are required to establish and maintain central tolerance throughout life. HAPCs and TECs are comprised of multiple subsets that play distinct and overlapping roles in central tolerance. Changes that occur in the composition and function of TEC and HAPC subsets across the lifespan have potential consequences for central tolerance. In keeping with this possibility, there are age-associated changes in the cellular composition and function of T cells and Treg. This review summarizes changes in T cell and Treg function during the perinatal to adult transition and in the course of normal aging, and relates these changes to age-associated alterations in thymic HAPC and TEC subsets.


Author(s):  
Thomas Dörner ◽  
Peter E. Lipsky

B cells have gained interest in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) beyond being the precursors of antibody-producing plasma cells since they are also a broader component of the adaptive immune system. They are capable of functioning as antigen-presenting cells for T-cell activation and can produce an array of cytokines. Disturbances of peripheral B-cell homeostasis together with the formation of ectopic lymphoid neogenesis within the inflamed synovium appears to be a characteristic of patients with RA. Enhanced generation of memory B cells and autoreactive plasma cells producing IgM-RF and ACPA-IgG antibodies together with formation of immune complexes contribute to the maintenance of RA, whereas treatment with B-cell-directed anti-CD20 and CLTA4-Ig therapy provides clinical benefit.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 3234
Author(s):  
Alexandra Eichhorst ◽  
Christoph Daniel ◽  
Rita Rzepka ◽  
Bettina Sehnert ◽  
Falk Nimmerjahn ◽  
...  

It is incompletely understood how self-antigens become targets of humoral immunity in antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases. In this context, alarmins are discussed as an important level of regulation. Alarmins are recognized by various receptors, such as receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE). As RAGE is upregulated under inflammatory conditions, strongly binds nucleic acids and mediates pro-inflammatory responses upon alarmin recognition, our aim was to examine its contribution to immune complex-mediated autoimmune diseases. This question was addressed employing RAGE−/− animals in murine models of pristane-induced lupus, collagen-induced, and serum-transfer arthritis. Autoantibodies were assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, renal disease by quantification of proteinuria and histology, arthritis by scoring joint inflammation. The associated immune status was determined by flow cytometry. In both disease entities, we detected tendentiously decreased autoantibody levels in RAGE−/− mice, however no differences in clinical outcome. In accordance with autoantibody levels, a subgroup of the RAGE−/− animals showed a decrease in plasma cells, and germinal center B cells and an increase in follicular B cells. Based on our results, we suggest that RAGE deficiency alone does not significantly affect antibody-mediated autoimmunity. RAGE may rather exert its effects along with other receptors linking environmental factors to auto-reactive immune responses.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 360-360
Author(s):  
Brian J. Taylor ◽  
Jitra Kriangkum ◽  
Jonathan J. Keats ◽  
Julie Pittman ◽  
Tony Reiman ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple myeloma is a B lineage cancer characterized by an accumulation of malignant plasma cells (PC) in the bone marrow (BM). Tumor cells are defined by a patient specific unique ‘clonotypic’ immunoglobulin heavy chain VDJ rearrangement, and one associated constant region, termed the ‘clinical isotype’ (IgM, IgD, IgG, or IgA). Previously, we have shown that we can detect the full spectrum of clonotypic clinical and non-clinical isotypes to varying degrees at diagnosis, during therapy, and after transplantation in most MM patients (Reiman T et. al., Blood 2001 Nov 1;98(9):2791–9). While the role of these non-clinical isotypes is unclear, expression of clonotypic IgM in MM patients of IgG or IgA clinical isotype was associated with reduced survival and advanced stage of disease at diagnosis. This, coupled with the ability of clonotypic IgM cells to engraft immunodeficient mice suggests a biological role for these cells in MM. One hypothesis that arose from this work was that the MM progenitor may be an IgM expressing B cell that persists throughout the course of disease, undergoing multiple isotype switching events to generate post-switch IgG or IgA expressing PC. To address this we analyzed clonotypic cells of 3 IgA and 12 IgG patients for evidence of multiple switch (S) junctions that may have arisen from IgM progenitors undergoing persistent class switch recombination (CSR) events. For each patient two timepoint samples were tested, usually a diagnostic BM and a second BM or blood sample, 1–4 years later. The 5–7 Kb VDJ-S region of MM patient clonotypic cells was amplified by long distance PCR (LD-PCR) using patient specific CDR2 and S region specific primers. Sequencing was performed on 7/12 IgG patients with an ordered set of 30 primers covering the VDJ-S region, including the S junction. This set also included patient specific CDR2 primers to confirm that the amplified fragments were clonotypic. For all of the patients studied, a single LD-PCR fragment was observed which remained unchanged in size over the timepoints studied. Sequence analysis confirmed that the clonotypic S junctions remained constant in paired samples, suggesting that malignant MM PC studied thus far arise from a single IgM cell that undergoes CSR as opposed to a population of IgM cells undergoing multiple independent CSR events. Interestingly, differences were observed in the DNA sequence of the VDJ-S region of paired timepoint samples: in 5/7 patients, mutations were seen exclusively in the later timepoint samples, and, most notably, 19 new mutations were detected in one patient, including 3 bp and 64 bp deletions immediately downstream of the intronic enhancer. In 4 of these later stage samples, mutations could be found immediately upstream of the intronic enhancer region. The new mutational signature of the VDJ-S regions of later stage timepoint samples represents a kind of intraclonal heterogeneity that has not been previously described in MM. Overall, it appears that switch activity is suppressed in these cells, but mutation is still ongoing. These results suggest that mutations in relapse plasma cells occurred first in clonotypic progenitor B-cells, rather than the malignant plasma cells themselves, because both mutation and recombination activities associated with CSR have been localized to germinal center B-cells. This highlights the potential of post-switch B cells in generating PC progeny throughout the course of malignancy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1503-1511 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. G. Kamburova ◽  
H. J. P. M. Koenen ◽  
K. J. E. Borgman ◽  
I. J. ten Berge ◽  
I. Joosten ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 210 (13) ◽  
pp. 2887-2902 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgia Simonetti ◽  
Amanda Carette ◽  
Kathryn Silva ◽  
Haowei Wang ◽  
Nilushi S. De Silva ◽  
...  

The transcription factor interferon regulatory factor-4 (IRF4) is expressed in B cells at most developmental stages. In antigen-activated B cells, IRF4 controls germinal center formation, class-switch recombination, and the generation of plasma cells. Here we describe a novel function for IRF4 in the homeostasis of mature B cells. Inducible deletion of irf4 specifically in B cells in vivo led to the aberrant accumulation of irf4-deleted follicular B cells in the marginal zone (MZ) area. IRF4-deficient B cells showed elevated protein expression and activation of NOTCH2, a transmembrane receptor and transcriptional regulator known to be required for MZ B cell development. Administration of a NOTCH2-inhibitory antibody abolished nuclear translocation of NOTCH2 in B cells within 12 h and caused a rapid and progressive disintegration of the MZ that was virtually complete 48 h after injection. The disappearance of the MZ was accompanied by a transient increase of MZ-like B cells in the blood rather than increased B cell apoptosis, demonstrating that continued NOTCH2 activation is critical for the retention of B cells in the MZ. Our results suggest that IRF4 controls the positioning of mature B cells in the lymphoid microenvironments by regulating NOTCH2 expression. These findings may have implications for the understanding of B cell malignancies with dysregulated IRF4 and NOTCH2 activity.


1998 ◽  
Vol 188 (8) ◽  
pp. 1421-1431 ◽  
Author(s):  
John P. Manis ◽  
Nienke van der Stoep ◽  
Ming Tian ◽  
Roger Ferrini ◽  
Laurie Davidson ◽  
...  

The 40-kb region downstream of the most 3′ immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain constant region gene (Cα) contains a series of transcriptional enhancers speculated to play a role in Ig heavy chain class switch recombination (CSR). To elucidate the function of this putative CSR regulatory region, we generated mice with germline mutations in which one or the other of the two most 5′ enhancers in this cluster (respectively referred to as HS3a and HS1,2) were replaced either with a pgk-neor cassette (referred to as HS3aN and HS1,2N mutations) or with a loxP sequence (referred to as HS3aΔ and HS1,2Δ, respectively). B cells homozygous for the HS3aN or HS1,2N mutations had severe defects in CSR to several isotypes. The phenotypic similarity of the two insertion mutations, both of which were cis-acting, suggested that inhibition might result from pgk-neor cassette gene insertion rather than enhancer deletion. Accordingly, CSR returned to normal in B cells homozygous for the HS3aΔ or HS1,2Δ mutations. In addition, induced expression of the specifically targeted pgk-neor genes was regulated similarly to that of germline CH genes. Our findings implicate a 3′ CSR regulatory locus that appears remarkably similar in organization and function to the β-globin gene 5′ LCR and which we propose may regulate differential CSR via a promoter competition mechanism.


2018 ◽  
Vol 215 (10) ◽  
pp. 2485-2496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle N. Wray-Dutra ◽  
Fahd Al Qureshah ◽  
Genita Metzler ◽  
Mohamed Oukka ◽  
Richard G. James ◽  
...  

Activated PI3K-delta syndrome (APDS) is an immunodeficiency caused by gain-of-function mutations in PIK3CD. This disease exhibits complex immune phenotypes including increased IgM, recurrent infection, and impaired vaccine responses. To better understand the impact of B cells in this disease, we generated an inducible model of the common APDS mutation (hPIK3CD-E1021K; referred to as aPIK3CD) and intercrossed these mice with B cell–specific Cre models. Mb1-aPIK3CD mice exhibited bone marrow B lymphopenia and, conversely, expansion of the peripheral innate B1a and MZ B cell compartments. aPIK3CD B cells manifest increased pS6 and increased survival at several stages, without alterations in cycling, and baseline increases in plasma cells, natural IgM, and IgG3. Finally, Mb1-aPIK3CD mice exhibited blunted T cell–independent immune responses, and both AID- and CD21-aPIK3CD mice displayed reduced class-switched antibodies following T cell–dependent immunization. Thus, aPIK3CD alters B cell development and function and is counter-productive during immune responses, providing insight into B cell–intrinsic contributions to the APDS phenotype.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessio D. Nahmad ◽  
Yuval Raviv ◽  
Miriam Horovitz-Fried ◽  
Ilan Sofer ◽  
Tal Akriv ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTHIV viremia can be controlled by chronic antiretroviral therapy. As a potentially single-shot alternative, B cells engineered by CRISPR/Cas9 to express anti-HIV broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) are capable of secreting high antibody titers. Here, we show that, upon immunization of mice, adoptively transferred engineered B cells home to germinal centers (GC) where they predominate over the endogenous response and differentiate into memory and plasma cells while undergoing class switch recombination (CSR). Immunization with a high affinity antigen increases accumulation in GCs and CSR rates. Boost immunization increases the rate of engineered B cells in GCs and antibody secretion, indicating memory retention. Finally, antibody sequences of engineered B cells in the spleen show patterns of clonal selection. Therefore, B cells can be engineered into what could be a living and evolving drug.


2015 ◽  
Vol 212 (11) ◽  
pp. 1947-1965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zicheng Hu ◽  
Jessica N. Lancaster ◽  
Chayanit Sasiponganan ◽  
Lauren I.R. Ehrlich

Autoimmunity results from a breakdown in central or peripheral tolerance. To establish central tolerance, developing T cells must enter the thymic medulla, where they scan antigen-presenting cells (APCs) displaying a diverse array of autoantigens. If a thymocyte is activated by a self-antigen, the cell undergoes either deletion or diversion into the regulatory T cell (T reg) lineage, thus maintaining self-tolerance. Mechanisms promoting thymocyte medullary entry and interactions with APCs are incompletely understood. CCR4 is poised to contribute to central tolerance due to its expression by post-positive selection thymocytes, and expression of its ligands by medullary thymic dendritic cells (DCs). Here, we use two-photon time-lapse microscopy to demonstrate that CCR4 promotes medullary entry of the earliest post-positive selection thymocytes, as well as efficient interactions between medullary thymocytes and DCs. In keeping with the contribution of thymic DCs to central tolerance, CCR4 is involved in regulating negative selection of polyclonal and T cell receptor (TCR) transgenic thymocytes. In the absence of CCR4, autoreactive T cells accumulate in secondary lymphoid organs and autoimmunity ensues. These studies reveal a previously unappreciated role for CCR4 in the establishment of central tolerance.


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