| Literature DB >> 27430722 |
Burton E Barnett1, Ryan P Staupe1, Pamela M Odorizzi1, Olesya Palko2, Vesselin T Tomov2, Alison E Mahan3, Bronwyn Gunn3, Diana Chen4, Michael A Paley1, Galit Alter3, Steven L Reiner5, Georg M Lauer4, John R Teijaro6, E John Wherry7.
Abstract
The role of Ab and B cells in preventing infection is established. In contrast, the role of B cell responses in containing chronic infections remains poorly understood. IgG2a (IgG1 in humans) can prevent acute infections, and T-bet promotes IgG2a isotype switching. However, whether IgG2a and B cell-expressed T-bet influence the host-pathogen balance during persisting infections is unclear. We demonstrate that B cell-specific loss of T-bet prevents control of persisting viral infection. T-bet in B cells controlled IgG2a production, as well as mucosal localization, proliferation, glycosylation, and a broad transcriptional program. T-bet controlled a broad antiviral program in addition to IgG2a because T-bet in B cells was important, even in the presence of virus-specific IgG2a. Our data support a model in which T-bet is a universal controller of antiviral immunity across multiple immune lineages.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27430722 PMCID: PMC4975981 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1500368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422