| Literature DB >> 33853929 |
Etienne Crickx1,2, Pascal Chappert1,3, Aurélien Sokal1, Sandra Weller1, Imane Azzaoui2,4, Alexis Vandenberghe2,4, Guillaume Bonnard4, Geoffrey Rossi1, Tatiana Fadeev1, Sébastien Storck1, Jehane Fadlallah5, Véronique Meignin6, Etienne Rivière7, Sylvain Audia8, Bertrand Godeau2, Marc Michel2, Jean-Claude Weill1, Claude-Agnès Reynaud1, Matthieu Mahévas9,2,4.
Abstract
Rituximab (RTX), an antibody targeting CD20, is widely used as a first-line therapeutic strategy in B cell-mediated autoimmune diseases. However, a large proportion of patients either do not respond to the treatment or relapse during B cell reconstitution. Here, we characterize the cellular basis responsible for disease relapse in secondary lymphoid organs in humans, taking advantage of the opportunity offered by therapeutic splenectomy in patients with relapsing immune thrombocytopenia. By analyzing the B and plasma cell immunoglobulin gene repertoire at bulk and antigen-specific single-cell level, we demonstrate that relapses are associated with two responses coexisting in germinal centers and involving preexisting mutated memory B cells that survived RTX treatment and naive B cells generated upon reconstitution of the B cell compartment. To identify distinctive characteristics of the memory B cells that escaped RTX-mediated depletion, we analyzed RTX refractory patients who did not respond to treatment at the time of B cell depletion. We identified, by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis, a population of quiescent splenic memory B cells that present a unique, yet reversible, RTX-shaped phenotype characterized by down-modulation of B cell-specific factors and expression of prosurvival genes. Our results clearly demonstrate that these RTX-resistant autoreactive memory B cells reactivate as RTX is cleared and give rise to plasma cells and further germinal center reactions. Their continued surface expression of CD19 makes them efficient targets for current anti-CD19 therapies. This study thus identifies a pathogenic contributor to autoimmune diseases that can be targeted by available therapeutic agents.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33853929 PMCID: PMC7610758 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abc3961
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956