scholarly journals T Cell Mediated Conversion of a Non-Anti-La Reactive B Cell to an Autoreactive Anti-La B Cell by Somatic Hypermutation

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 1198
Author(s):  
Michael P. Bachmann ◽  
Tabea Bartsch ◽  
Claudia C. Bippes ◽  
Dominik Bachmann ◽  
Edinson Puentes-Cala ◽  
...  

Since the first description of nuclear autoantigens in the late 1960s and early 1970s, researchers, including ourselves, have found it difficult to establish monoclonal antibodies (mabs) against nuclear antigens, including the La/SS-B (Sjögrens’ syndrome associated antigen B) autoantigen. To date, only a few anti-La mabs have been derived by conventional hybridoma technology; however, those anti-La mabs were not bona fide autoantibodies as they recognize either human La specific, cryptic, or post-translationally modified epitopes which are not accessible on native mouse La protein. Herein, we present a series of novel murine anti-La mabs including truly autoreactive ones. These mabs were elicited from a human La transgenic animal through adoptive transfer of T cells from non-transgenic mice immunized with human La antigen. Detailed epitope and paratope analyses experimentally confirm the hypothesis that somatic hypermutations that occur during T cell dependent maturation can lead to autoreactivity to the nuclear La/SS-B autoantigen.

2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (3) ◽  
pp. 645-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Menno C. van Zelm ◽  
Tomasz Szczepański ◽  
Mirjam van der Burg ◽  
Jacques J.M. van Dongen

The contribution of proliferation to B lymphocyte homeostasis and antigen responses is largely unknown. We quantified the replication history of mouse and human B lymphocyte subsets by calculating the ratio between genomic coding joints and signal joints on kappa-deleting recombination excision circles (KREC) of the IGK-deleting rearrangement. This approach was validated with in vitro proliferation studies. We demonstrate that naive mature B lymphocytes, but not transitional B lymphocytes, undergo in vivo homeostatic proliferation in the absence of somatic mutations in the periphery. T cell–dependent B cell proliferation was substantially higher and showed higher frequencies of somatic hypermutation than T cell–independent responses, fitting with the robustness and high affinity of T cell–dependent antibody responses. More extensive proliferation and somatic hypermutation in antigen-experienced B lymphocytes from human adults compared to children indicated consecutive responses upon additional antigen exposures. Our combined observations unravel the contribution of proliferation to both B lymphocyte homeostasis and antigen-induced B cell expansion. We propose an important role for both processes in humoral immunity. These new insights will support the understanding of peripheral B cell regeneration after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation or B cell–directed antibody therapy, and the identification of defects in homeostatic or antigen-induced B cell proliferation in patients with common variable immunodeficiency or another antibody deficiency.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Rode von Essen ◽  
Martin Kongsbak ◽  
Carsten Geisler

During an immune response antigen-primed B-cells increase their antigen responsiveness by affinity maturation mediated by somatic hypermutation of the genes encoding the antigen-specific B-cell receptor (BCR) and by selection of higher-affinity B cell clones. Unlike the BCR, the T-cell receptor (TCR) cannot undergo affinity maturation. Nevertheless, antigen-primed T cells significantly increase their antigen responsiveness compared to antigen-inexperienced (naïve) T cells in a process called functional avidity maturation. This paper covers studies that describe differences in T-cell antigen responsiveness during T-cell differentiation along with examples of the mechanisms behind functional avidity maturation in T cells.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (12) ◽  
pp. 4849-4856 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominik Schenten ◽  
Angela Egert ◽  
Manolis Pasparakis ◽  
Klaus Rajewsky

AbstractIn T-cell–dependent antibody responses, antigen-specific B cells undergo a phase of secondary antibody diversification in germinal centers (GCs). Somatic hypermutation (SHM) introduces mutations into the rearranged immunoglobulin (Ig) variable (V) region genes, and class-switch recombination (CSR) alters the Ig heavy (H) chain constant region. Aberrant SHM or CSR is thought to contribute to the development of GC-derived B-cell malignancies. Diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) are a heterogeneous group of such GC-derived tumors. Based on their gene expression profile, DLBCLs can be divided into activated B-cell–like and GC-like subgroups. The human gene HGAL is predominantly expressed in GCs. It is also part of the gene expression signature of GC-like DLBCL, and its high expression in DLBCL has been associated with a better clinical prognosis. We have generated mice deficient of the HGAL homologue M17 in order to investigate its functional significance. The mutant animals form normal GCs, undergo efficient CSR and SHM, and mount T-cell–dependent antibody responses similar to wild-type controls. Thus, M17 is dispensable for the GC reaction, and its potential function in the pathogenesis of DLBCL remains elusive.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Bieberich ◽  
Rodrigo Vazquez-Lombardi ◽  
Alexander Yermanos ◽  
Roy A. Ehling ◽  
Derek M. Mason ◽  
...  

AbstractCOVID-19 disease outcome is highly dependent on adaptive immunity from T and B lymphocytes, which play a critical role in the control, clearance and long-term protection against SARS-CoV-2. To date, there is limited knowledge on the composition of the T and B cell immune receptor repertoires [T cell receptors (TCRs) and B cell receptors (BCRs)] and transcriptomes in convalescent COVID-19 patients of different age groups. Here, we utilize single-cell sequencing (scSeq) of lymphocyte immune repertoires and transcriptomes to quantitatively profile the adaptive immune response in COVID-19 patients of varying age. We discovered highly expanded T and B cells in multiple patients, with the most expanded clonotypes coming from the effector CD8+ T cell population. Highly expanded CD8+ and CD4+ T cell clones show elevated markers of cytotoxicity (CD8: PRF1, GZMH, GNLY; CD4: GZMA), whereas clonally expanded B cells show markers of transition into the plasma cell state and activation across patients. By comparing young and old convalescent COVID-19 patients (mean ages = 31 and 66.8 years, respectively), we found that clonally expanded B cells in young patients were predominantly of the IgA isotype and their BCRs had incurred higher levels of somatic hypermutation than elderly patients. In conclusion, our scSeq analysis defines the adaptive immune repertoire and transcriptome in convalescent COVID-19 patients and shows important age-related differences implicated in immunity against SARS-CoV-2.


2008 ◽  
Vol 205 (9) ◽  
pp. 2033-2042 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferenc A. Scheeren ◽  
Maho Nagasawa ◽  
Kees Weijer ◽  
Tom Cupedo ◽  
Jörg Kirberg ◽  
...  

IgM+IgD+CD27+ B cells from peripheral blood have been described as circulating marginal zone B cells. It is still unknown when and where these cells develop. These IgM+IgD+CD27+ B cells exhibit somatic hypermutations (SHMs) in their B cell receptors, but the exact nature of the signals leading to induction of these SHMs remains elusive. Here, we show that IgM+IgD+CD27+ B cells carrying SHMs are observed during human fetal development. To examine the role of T cells in human IgM+IgD+CD27+ B cell development we used an in vivo model in which Rag2−/−γC−/− mice were repopulated with human hematopoietic stem cells. Using Rag2−/−γC−/− mice on a Nude background, we demonstrated that development and induction of SHMs of human IgM+IgD+CD27+ B cells can occur in a T cell–independent manner.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4002-4002
Author(s):  
Shrutii Sarda ◽  
Geoffrey Lowman ◽  
Michelle Toro ◽  
Loni Pickle ◽  
Timothy Looney ◽  
...  

Abstract Background T-cell and B-cell repertoire analysis is used in oncology research, to understand the etiology of complex disease phenotypes, for the identification of biomarkers predictive of disease burden, outcome, and response to treatment, and for research in diagnosis and recurrence monitoring. Key predictors include secondary and tertiary repertoire features not reported by existing sequencing software solutions. For example, due to ongoing somatic hypermutation in mature B-cell receptors, the underlying sequence of a given clone can accumulate base differences and appear as several distinct clones with smaller frequencies, thereby hampering the ability of analysis software to detect its presence as a single dominant clone with the highest frequency. This has particularly detrimental implications for research in disorders such as follicular lymphoma and may require clonal lineage analysis for proper mitigation. Therefore, to aid the downstream analytics of biomarker identification and the study of complex disease, we developed fully automated analysis solutions that directly compute and report several key features (clonal lineage, amongst several others described below) pertinent to this area of research. Results We developed the Oncomine™ TCR Beta-SR, TCR Gamma-SR, BCR IGH-SR and BCR IGKL-SR workflows on Ion Reporter™ to characterize T-cell (β, γ chains) and B-cell (heavy and light (κ, δ) chains) repertoires. These workflows generate output tables and visualizations for primary repertoire features such as detected clones (viz., unique rearrangements in the receptor DNA sequence), their frequencies, as well as their somatic hypermutation levels in the case of B-cells (Figure 1a & 1b) for clonality assessment and rare clone detection. The software also quantifies and reports several secondary and tertiary repertoire features in a sample, such as clonal diversity, evenness of the clonal population, and B-cell lineage groupings useful in identifying related sub-clones. It includes spectratyping format plots to simultaneously assess the above features as a function of v-gene usage and CDR3 length combinations (Figure 1c & 1d), thereby providing users a complete snapshot of the repertoire, and also the capability to quickly determine CDR3 lengths and V-gene usage of highly expanded or mutated clones. A separate CDR3 lengths histogram is included, as well as a heatmap that depicts the distributions/intensity of Variable-Joining gene combinations (Figure 1e & 1f). Furthermore, the TCR workflows also report (i) convergence frequencies (fraction of clones with different nucleotide sequences, but identical amino acid sequences), and (ii) haplotype grouping for an analyzed sample, based on V-gene allele genotyping and clustering (Figure 1g). In addition, the long read Oncomine™ BCR IGH-LR workflow uniquely reports the isotype class for every detected clone, and includes a visualization of total reads, clones and lineages in the sample represented by isotype (Figure 1h). Conclusion The Oncomine™ immune repertoire workflows for T-cell and B-cell receptor sequencing were designed to be of high utility in distinct areas of malignancy research, and we expect them to greatly simplify complex downstream analyses. The unique capabilities of the workflows to automatically report secondary and tertiary repertoire features such as (i) clonal lineages for improved dominant clone detection in blood cancers, (ii) TCR clone convergence for prediction of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors [1,2], (iii) TCR haplotype grouping for evaluation of risk factors for autoimmunity and immune-related adverse events [3], and (iv) isotype classification in BCRs for studying pan-cancer immune evasion mechanisms, demonstrate the clear advantages of using these automated workflows over other existing solutions. For research use only. References 1) Looney TJ et al. (2020) TCR Convergence in Individuals Treated With Immune Checkpoint Inhibition for Cancer. Front. Immunol. 10:2985. 2) Naidus et al. (2021) Early changes in the circulating T cells are associated with clinical outcomes after PD-L1 blockade by durvalumab in advanced NSCLC patients. Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy 70:2095-2102 3) Looney TJ et al. (2019) Haplotype Analysis of the T-Cell Receptor Beta (TCRB) Locus by Long-amplicon TCRB Repertoire Sequencing. Journal of Immunotherapy and Precision Oncology. 2 (4): 137-143. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Sarda: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Current Employment. Lowman: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Current Employment. Toro: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Current Employment. Pickle: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Current Employment. Looney: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Ended employment in the past 24 months; Singular Genomics: Current Employment. Hyland: Thermo Fisher Scientific: Current Employment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florian Bieberich ◽  
Rodrigo Vazquez-Lombardi ◽  
Alexander Yermanos ◽  
Roy A. Ehling ◽  
Derek M. Mason ◽  
...  

COVID-19 disease outcome is highly dependent on adaptive immunity from T and B lymphocytes, which play a critical role in the control, clearance and long-term protection against SARS-CoV-2. To date, there is limited knowledge on the composition of the T and B cell immune receptor repertoires [T cell receptors (TCRs) and B cell receptors (BCRs)] and transcriptomes in convalescent COVID-19 patients of different age groups. Here, we utilize single-cell sequencing (scSeq) of lymphocyte immune repertoires and transcriptomes to quantitatively profile the adaptive immune response in COVID-19 patients of varying age. We discovered highly expanded T and B cells in multiple patients, with the most expanded clonotypes coming from the effector CD8+ T cell population. Highly expanded CD8+ and CD4+ T cell clones show elevated markers of cytotoxicity (CD8: PRF1, GZMH, GNLY; CD4: GZMA), whereas clonally expanded B cells show markers of transition into the plasma cell state and activation across patients. By comparing young and old convalescent COVID-19 patients (mean ages = 31 and 66.8 years, respectively), we found that clonally expanded B cells in young patients were predominantly of the IgA isotype and their BCRs had incurred higher levels of somatic hypermutation than elderly patients. In conclusion, our scSeq analysis defines the adaptive immune repertoire and transcriptome in convalescent COVID-19 patients and shows important age-related differences implicated in immunity against SARS-CoV-2.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3132-3132
Author(s):  
Dimitrios Papaioannou ◽  
Anna-Maria Strothmeyer ◽  
Marcus Dühren-von Minden ◽  
Marcelo A. Navarrete ◽  
Katja Zirlik ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3132 The idiotype (Id) of malignant lymphomas is a tumor-specific antigen and has been evaluated for active immunotherapy predominantly in follicular lymphoma (FL). We have previously described “reverse immunology” evidence that HLA class I-dependent and hence presumably T-cell mediated selection pressure restricts the growth of malignant FL clones with comparatively highly immunogenic Ids (Strothmeyer et al., Blood, epub 2010). This effect was mostly attributable to the Id CDRs. We therefore hypothesized that somatic hypermutation, a constitutively active process in FL, is the mechanism that creates immunogenic Id epitopes and enables T-cell mediated immunosurveillance. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed Id of FL that utilized the same Vh gene but arose in individuals with different HLA types (IGHV3-23*01, n=9 patients: IGHV3-7*01, n=3). For every represented HLA type, an “immunogenicity landscape” mapping was performed by plotting the ten most immunogenic peptides of the germ-line Vh sequence in comparison to FL Id peptides in the order of their HLA binding strength as predicted by the BIMAS algorithm for the respective patient. Neither changes in the order of peptides nor major differences in their binding scores were observed. Parallel plotting of Vh-related Ids from different HLA types revealed novel peptides with higher binding scores within and in addition to the ten highest ranking epitopes (Figures). Comparisons of these peptides with the germ-line and the index patient's sequence directly demonstrated that somatic hypermutation creates peptides that would have strongly bound to HLA type of the index patient but were immunologically neutral in the patient of origin. Occurrence of such highly immunogenic peptides by somatic hypermutation would hence not be tolerated by an FL patient's immune system. To explore whether this mechanism also operates in other lymphoma types, we analyzed predicted HLA-binding Id peptides from mantle cell (n=20) and marginal zone (n=12) lymphomas. Like in FL, the median sum of the 20 peptides with the highest BIMAS scores were to various degrees less immunogenic on the autologous HLA type than on allogeneic HLA types (ratio of autologous to allogeneic BIMAS sum scores: FL: 0.63; MCL: 0.78; MZL: 0.87). In subanalyses of the CDR, these differences were observed only in FL and MCL but not in MZL (CDR1: FL 0.40, MCL 0.55. MZL 1.39; CDR2: FL 0.25, MCL 0.36; MZL 1.54: CDR3: FL 0.43, MCL 0.53, MZL 1.28). To investigate whether HLA-dependent immunosurveillance acts on normal B-cell receptors, we compared BIMAS sum scores of 96 non-clonal Ids present in diagnostic biopsies of 29 FL and MCL patients. These Ids represent bona fide contaminating, healthy B cells. No significant differential immunogenicity existed for the entire Vh sequences or individual CDR regions, regardless of their mutational status. We therefore randomly sequenced B-cell receptors from two mouse strains with an identical B6 genetic background but a congenic H-2 complex (C57BL/6ByJ: H-2b; 422 sequences; B6-H2d/bByJ: H-2d; 412 sequences). In these SPF-bred mice, 61% and 71% of sequences, respectively, were unmutated. Significantly higher immunogenicity was observed in the FR1-3 regions of C57BL/6ByJ compared to B6-H2d/bByJ Ids on H-2kd (p=0.04). Also, several Vh genes were significantly (Fisher's exact test) less frequent in mice expressing the MHC type with stronger binding to Id-derived peptides of the corresponding germ-line Vh sequence. Overall, the ratio of predicted MHC binding strength of the 20 highest scoring peptides from 59 represented germ-line Vh genes correlated to the relative frequency of representation of these genes in the peripheral B-cell repertoire (p=0.016, Pearson correlation). Collectively, these results indicate that somatic hypermutation is the predominant mechanism that enables T-cell mediated control of malignant B-cell clones in FL but possibly also MCL on the basis of the HLA binding of Id-derived peptides. In addition, HLA binding strength of germ-line-encoded Vh peptides appears to exert a subtle modulation of the primary B cell repertoire by MHC class I-restricted T cells. These findings strengthen the theoretical basis of active Id-directed immunotherapy of B-cell lymphomas with mutated antigen receptors. In addition, they may also lead to a novel explanation for the association of HLA type with aberrant functions of the nonmalignant immune system. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (21) ◽  
pp. 12046
Author(s):  
Tabea Bartsch ◽  
Claudia Arndt ◽  
Liliana R. Loureiro ◽  
Alexandra Kegler ◽  
Edinson Puentes-Cala ◽  
...  

The anti-La mab 312B, which was established by hybridoma technology from human-La transgenic mice after adoptive transfer of anti-human La T cells, immunoprecipitates both native eukaryotic human and murine La protein. Therefore, it represents a true anti-La autoantibody. During maturation, the anti-La mab 312B acquired somatic hypermutations (SHMs) which resulted in the replacement of four aa in the complementarity determining regions (CDR) and seven aa in the framework regions. The recombinant derivative of the anti-La mab 312B in which all the SHMs were corrected to the germline sequence failed to recognize the La antigen. We therefore wanted to learn which SHM(s) is (are) responsible for anti-La autoreactivity. Humanization of the 312B ab by grafting its CDR regions to a human Ig backbone confirms that the CDR sequences are mainly responsible for anti-La autoreactivity. Finally, we identified that a single amino acid replacement (D > Y) in the germline sequence of the CDR3 region of the heavy chain of the anti-La mab 312B is sufficient for anti-La autoreactivity.


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