| Literature DB >> 31092727 |
Akiko Watanabe1, Kuei-Ying Su1,2, Masayuki Kuraoka1, Guang Yang1, Alexander E Reynolds1, Aaron G Schmidt3,4, Stephen C Harrison5,6, Barton F Haynes1,7,8, E William St Clair1,8, Garnett Kelsoe1,7.
Abstract
Immunological tolerance removes or inactivates self-reactive B cells, including those that also recognize cross-reactive foreign antigens. Whereas a few microbial pathogens exploit these "holes" in the B cell repertoire by mimicking host antigens to evade immune surveillance, the extent to which tolerance reduces the B cell repertoire to foreign antigens is unknown. Here, we use single-cell cultures to determine the repertoires of human B cell antigen receptors (BCRs) before (transitional B cells) and after (mature B cells) the second B cell tolerance checkpoint in both healthy donors and in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) . In healthy donors, the majority (~70%) of transitional B cells that recognize foreign antigens also bind human self-antigens (foreign+self), and peripheral tolerance halves the frequency of foreign+self-reactive mature B cells. In contrast, in SLE patients who are defective in the second tolerance checkpoint, frequencies of foreign+self-reactive B cells remain unchanged during maturation of transitional to mature B cells. Patterns of foreign+self-reactivity among mature B cells from healthy donors differ from those of SLE patients. We propose that immune tolerance significantly reduces the scope of the BCR repertoire to microbial pathogens and that cross-reactivity between foreign and self epitopes may be more common than previously appreciated.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; Immunology; Lupus; Tolerance
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31092727 PMCID: PMC6542615 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.122551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708