| Literature DB >> 29556239 |
Susan Malkiel1, Ashley N Barlev1,2, Yemil Atisha-Fregoso1,3, Jolien Suurmond1, Betty Diamond1.
Abstract
Plasma cells (PCs) are responsible for the production of protective antibodies against infectious agents but they also produce pathogenic antibodies in autoimmune diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Traditionally, high affinity IgG autoantibodies are thought to arise through germinal center (GC) responses. However, class switching and somatic hypermutation can occur in extrafollicular (EF) locations, and this pathway has also been implicated in SLE. The pathway from which PCs originate may determine several characteristics, such as PC lifespan and sensitivity to therapeutics. Although both GC and EF responses have been implicated in SLE, we hypothesize that one of these pathways dominates in each individual patient and genetic risk factors may drive this predominance. While it will be important to distinguish polymorphisms that contribute to a GC-driven or EF B cell response to develop targeted treatments, the challenge will be not only to identify the differentiation pathway but the molecular mechanisms involved. In B cells, this task is complicated by the cross-talk between the B cell receptor, toll-like receptors (TLR), and cytokine signaling molecules, which contribute to both GC and EF responses. While risk variants that affect the function of dendritic cells and T follicular helper cells are likely to primarily influence GC responses, it will be important to discover whether some risk variants in the interferon and TLR pathways preferentially influence EF responses. Identifying the pathways of autoreactive PC differentiation in SLE may help us to understand patient heterogeneity and thereby guide precision therapy.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; autoantibodies; plasma cells; systemic lupus erythematosus; tolerance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29556239 PMCID: PMC5845388 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1B cell subsets in T-independent plasma cell development. B-1 cells in the peritoneal and pleural cavities can produce antibodies of the IgM and IgA isotype, either spontaneously (B-1a) or in response to T-independent antigens (B-1a and B-1b). Marginal zone B cells produce mostly IgM in response to T-independent antigens.
Figure 2B cell subsets in T-dependent plasma cell (PC) development. Both marginal zone B cells and follicular (FO) B cells can contribute to the extrafollicular (EF) PC response, whereas the germinal center (GC) response and subsequent PC differentiation is predominantly driven by FO B cells.
Figure 4The extrafollicular (EF) pathway for the generation of autoreactive plasma cells (PCs) in systemic lupus erythematosus. Shown here are the potential mechanisms that can contribute to enhanced extrafollicular PC responses. These include (1) expansion of marginal zone (MZ) B cells, which often exhibit autoreactive receptors; (2) increased Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, which can directly activate B cells (B cell-intrinsic) or can enhance Th responses through their effect on dendritic cells (B cell-extrinsic); (3) B cell hyperresponsiveness, which can affect the activation of follicular B cells; (4) increased class switch recombination which can lead to more pathogenic IgG autoantibodies; (5) somatic hypermutation which can lead to affinity maturation of autoreactive PCs; and (6) increased PC survival.
Figure 5The germinal center (GC) pathway for the generation of autoreactive plasma cells (PCs) in systemic lupus erythematosus. Shown here are the potential mechanisms that can contribute to enhanced PC differentiation during GC responses. These include (1) loss of follicular exclusion, which can lead to recruitment of autoreactive B cells into GC responses; (2) B cell hyperresponsiveness which can affect the activation of follicular B cells; (3) increased Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, which can affect initial activation of B cells as well as the GC response itself; (4) de novo autoreactivity, generated through somatic hypermutation (SHM) and leading to the generation of autoreactive GC B cells from non-autoreactive precursors; (5) aberrant selection and survival, which can diminish tolerance mechanisms; (6) increased T follicular helper (Tfh) activity, which can increase the extent of GC responses as well as PC differentiation; (7) cell fate decisions that increase PC differentiation; and (8) increased PC survival.
Figure 3Tolerance in mature cell subsets in healthy individuals. B-1 cells are not shown in this figure as their relative autoreactivity compared to the other subsets is not exactly known. Marginal zone (MZ) B cells are enriched for autoreactive B cell receptors (BCRs) (polyreactive or antinuclear) compared to follicular B cells. IgG + memory B cells have a lower frequency of autoreactivity compared to naive B cells, suggesting a tolerance checkpoint in the germinal center. The autoreactivity in IgM plasma cells (PCs) has not been directly reported, but the fact that IgM autoantibodies are commonly found in healthy individuals and have an anti-inflammatory role, suggests that some autoreactive IgM + PCs are present and more common than autoreactive IgG + PCs. The low frequency of autoreactive BCRs in IgG + PCs compared to IgG + memory B cells suggests an additional strong tolerance checkpoint that prevents the development of serum IgG autoantibodies.
The role of genes with risk alleles in EF and GC responses.
| Gene | Function of gene | Function of risk allele | Potential role in EF | Potential role in GC | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antigen presentation | Presentation of self-specific T cell epitopes | May increase T-dependent EF responses | Expansion of Tfh, GC responses and PC differentiation | ( | |
| Costimulatory molecule on many cell types primarily interacting with OX40 on activated T cells promoting T cell functions, cytokine and Ab production, and PC generation | Most likely a response eQTL, as DNA heterozygous for the 5′ rs2205860 SNP had enhanced binding to NF-κB; no significant differences in basal expression in EBV-transformed cells or primary cells | Required for T cell-dependent EF Ab response driven by MZ DCs | Supports Tfh maturation in mice (B cell-intrinsic) and in humans (expression on myeloid APCs) | ( | |
| T cell costimulation through CD28, CTLA-4, PD-L1 | Unknown | Little effect on Ab production by short-lived plasmablasts (in CD80−/− mice) | Increased maturation of Tfh and generation of long-lived PC | ( | |
| Src-family kinase that phosphorylates both activating and inhibitory receptors in B cells and myeloid cells. Its role in activating ITAMs is probably redundant with other Src family kinases, therefore its role in inhibitory receptors seems most crucial | Unknown SLE patients have decreased expression of Lyn in B cells | Lyn−/− mice have EF PC differentiation without GCs in some studies | Lyn−/− mice have spontaneous GCs in some studies | ( | |
| Src-family kinase that phosphorylates both activating and inhibitory receptors in B cells | Decreased expression in B cells, increased B cell activation | Increased TI IgG antibody responses in Blk+/− mice, with no effect on IgM | Increased numbers of switched memory cells in risk carriers suggests more active GC responses, but TD antibody responses in Blk+/− or −/− mice not affected | ( | |
| Signaling molecule involved in BCR- and CD40-mediated signaling in B cells, positively regulates Ca2+ release in B cells, negatively regulates CD40-mediated signaling | Differential expression of two splice variants, but functional consequences unknown | Normal antibody responses to TI antigen, but the IgM response in TD responses was increased, possibly due to increased survival of EF PCs | Normal IgG antibody responses to TD antigen suggesting that there is no major influence on switched TD responses, although there is a slight increase in spontaneous IgG2a in Bank1−/− mice | ( | |
| Protein tyrosine phosphatase that has inhibitory function in B and T cell signaling | Risk allele has increased inhibitory function, causing decreased B cell activation, proliferation and signaling leading to impaired central B cell tolerance as well as impaired T cell responses | Impaired central tolerance; unclear if PTPN22 affects EF responses; deficiency of PEP (mouse ortholog) in mice did not alter spontaneous IgM and IgG3 levels, suggesting no effect on extrafollicular antibody production | Lower frequency of memory cells in risk allele carriers suggests that it may inhibit GC responses consistent with increased GCs and serum IgG in PEP−/− mice | ( | |
| Negative regulator of NF-κB signaling in response to TLR, TNF, and CD40 signaling in B cells and other immune cells | Reduced expression in EBV transformed cells with one risk variant and reduced anti-inflammatory activity in transfected HEK cells with another risk variant | B cell-specific A20 deficiency in mice leads to alterations in the MZ compartment and consistently enhanced IgM production (spontaneous, as well as TD and TI immunizations), but no difference in IgG3 | B cell specific A20 deficiency in mice leads to elevated numbers of GC B cells, and spontaneous IgG2 levels in old mice which deposited in kidneys; however, inconsistent effects on TD IgG production upon immunization in different studies | ( | |
| Ubiquitin-binding protein with diverse targets; interaction with TNFAIP3 negatively regulates NF-κB; also known to repress PPARs, which may increase B cell activity | Reduced expression in EBV-transformed B cells from H1 and H2 risk haplotypes; H1 contains coding SNP near a nuclear export sequence | Mutation of polyubiquitin binding site increased formation of EF PCs | Mutation of polyubiquitin-binding site induced spontaneous GC, increased TFH, CSR, and production of autoreactive Abs thru TLR-mediated NF-κB pathway | ( | |
| Tyrosine kinase protein that phosphorylates Src family kinases leading to their inactivation. Src family kinases can act on both activating and inhibitory receptors in B and T cells | Increased expression in B cells, increased B cell activation (Lyn phosphorylation, Ca2+ mobilization), expansion of transitional B cells | Unknown, but increased signaling may enhance PC differentiation | Csk is low in memory cells but its function in GC responses is not known | ( | |
| Inhibitory receptor for IgG on B cells and other immune cells | Impairment of receptor mobility, lipid rafts and inhibitory signaling | Enhanced antibody production upon TI immunization, although not observed in all studies | Enhanced GC responses in FCGR2B−/− mice. Spontaneous GC B cells have increased self-reactivity, but the checkpoint to PCs is still intact in FCGR2B−/− mice, so uncertain if autoreactive PCs in these mice are GC-derived | ( | |
| Production of type I IFN in response to TLR ligands, macrophage polarization, enhanced PC differentiation | Increased expression and activation in monocytes from SLE patients with the risk allele | IRF5−/− mice have decreased IgG1 responses upon TI immunization and have decreased PC numbers in MRL/lpr mice, suggesting that increased expression of IRF5 may enhance EF responses | IRF5−/− mice have diminished GC-derived antibodies, suggesting the IRF5 risk allele may enhance GC PC differentiation | ( | |
| Transcription factor critical for myeloid and lymphocyte functions; major responder to IL-12; role in IFN-α signaling | Increased expression in PBMCs correlated with SNPs rs3821236, rs3024866 (both in the same haplotype block) and rs7574865 but not with other SNPs | STAT4−/− had no effect on antibody titers or pathology in EF model (MRL/lpr) | Regulates Tfh through Bcl-6 and T-bet in T cells; indirectly upregulates T-bet in B cells, which facilitates spontaneous GC; STAT4−/− reduced autoantibody production and glomerulonephritis in B6.TC model (Sle1,2,3 congenic) | ( | |
| Transcriptional repressor that promotes CSR/SHM and is required for memory B cell differentiation | No expression differences associated with rs597325 in primary blood cell types | Deficiency increases IgM PC differentiation | Bach2 can enhance memory B cell differentiation while blocking plasma cell differentiation | ( | |
| Transcription factor required for PC differentiation/transcription factor that alters DC function | Decreased expression of Blimp-1 in DCs leading to increased cytokine production (unknown function of risk allele in PCs) | Unknown | Expansion of Tfh and increased GC responses in DC-Blimp-1-deficient mice | ( | |
| Transcription factor that inhibits PC differentiation together with PU.1 and distribution into FO or MZ compartments | Increased expression in EBV-transformed cells | Increased IRF8 expression presumably would decrease PC differentiation | Increased function of IRF8 could lead to enhanced GC responses, through regulation of Bcl-6, AID, and MDM2 | ( | |
| Transcription factor involved in lymphocyte development and function; important in B cell maturation and activation | Unknown | Deficiency impairs the MZ B cell compartment but not the generation of short-lived PCs following immunization | Deficiency induces spontaneous GCs and production of autoantibodies; deficiency prevents generation of high-affinity BM PCs following immunization | ( | |
| Transcription factor important for lymphocyte development and differentiation; it is also involved in maintaining B cell tolerance through anergy maintenance | Reduced expression of Ets1 in EBV-transformed cells and PBMCs | Increased EF PC responses in Ets1−/− | Loss of anergy may increase participation of autoreactive B cells in GC reactions | ( | |
| Apoptosis of immune cells through engagement of Fas | Increased surface expression on circulating fibrocytes | Based on studies in MRL/lpr mice, increased expression of FasL would be expected to decrease EF PC responses | Fas/FasL interactions are important for apoptosis in GC, thereby potentially affecting survival and selection of autoreactive GC B cells | ( | |
| Activation of immune cells by RNA viruses or self-antigen | Increased expression in PBMCs | EF PCs in AM14 Tg MRL/lpr mice are driven by TLR-7 | GC responses are driven by B cell-intrinsic TLR7 in B6 and B6.Sle1b mice and FDCs in 564Igi RNP-specific lupus model | ( | |
| Lysosomal amino-acid transporter required for endosomal TLR signaling and IFN1 production | One risk variant is associated with reduced expression in monocytes | SLC15a4 mutant mice, which are unable to produce IFN1, have reduced anti-chromatin IgG and IgM in B6/lpr mice, but have otherwise normal T-dependent and independent responses | T-dependent IgG2a/c OVA responses are decreased in SLC15a4−/− mice, but not in SLC15a4 mutant mice. IgG autoantibodies in pristane-induced lupus aC15a4 deficiency, suggesting that reduced expression in risk allele carriers may block GC-derived PCs | ( |
The categories “potential role in EF or GC” are speculative and based on our understanding of the literature included in the reference column.