| Literature DB >> 34790201 |
Justine Castañeda1, Yessia Hidalgo2, Daniela Sauma1, Mario Rosemblatt1,3,4, María Rosa Bono1, Sarah Núñez4.
Abstract
The thymus is home to a significant number of resident B cells which possess several unique characteristics regarding their origin, phenotype and function. Evidence shows that they originate both from precursors that mature intrathymically and as the entry of recirculating mature B cells. Under steady-state conditions they exhibit hallmark signatures of activated B cells, undergo immunoglobulin class-switch, and express the Aire transcription factor. These features are imprinted within the thymus and enable B cells to act as specialized antigen-presenting cells in the thymic medulla that contribute negative selection of self-reactive T cells. Though, most studies have focused on B cells located in the medulla, a second contingent of B cells is also present in non-epithelial perivascular spaces of the thymus. This latter group of B cells, which includes memory B cells and plasma cells, is not readily detected in the thymus of infants or young mice but gradually accumulates during normal aging. Remarkably, in many autoimmune diseases the thymus suffers severe structural atrophy and infiltration of B cells in the perivascular spaces, which organize into follicles similar to those typically found in secondary lymphoid organs. This review provides an overview of the pathways involved in thymic B cell origin and presents an integrated view of both thymic medullary and perivascular B cells and their respective physiological and pathological roles in central tolerance and autoimmune diseases.Entities:
Keywords: B cells; aging; autoimmune disease; central tolerance; thymus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34790201 PMCID: PMC8591215 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.766698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Origin of Thymic B cells. Schematic representation of different pathways involved in the origin of thymic B cells. One pathway proposes intrathymic differentiation from fetal liver and bone marrow B cell progenitors that give rise to resident thymic B cells. A second pathway is the migration of mature B cells, which acquire the phenotype of resident thymic B cells through the interaction with developing thymocytes (discussed in Section 2).
Figure 2Interaction between thymic B cells and CD4 SP thymocytes. In the thymic medulla, B cells present self-antigen to CD4 SP thymocytes through MHC-II and engagement of CD40/CD40L. The interaction between both cells leads to 1) clonal deletion or generation of thymic regulatory T cells (Treg) and 2) is required for maintaining normal thymic B cell numbers and acquisition of a thymic resident B cell phenotype.
Figure 3Histological changes in aged/autoimmune thymus. Schematic representation of characteristic alterations in the aged/autoimmune thymus. The medullary epithelial network is disrupted by the enlargement of perivascular spaces (PVS). B cells and plasma cells infiltrate the thymus and localize within the PVS forming germinal center-like structures.
Various autoimmune disease and relevant animal models that are associated with thymic pathology.
| Thymic pathology | Thymic pathology | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Disease | Thymic stromal changes | Cellular changes | Animal model | Thymic stromal changes | Cellular changes |
| Myasthenia gravis | Epithelial areas are replaced by perivascular spaces ( | Formation of germinal centers containing activated B cells ( | K5-CXCL13 mice immunized with AchR ( | Not specified | Recruitment of B cells in the thymus ( |
| SLE | Severe atrophy, loss of the cortex and disorganization of epithelial cells in the medulla ( | Germinal centers in a reduced subset of patients ( | BWF1, MRL/MP-lpr/lpr, BXSB/MpJ Yaa and C3H HeJ-gld/gld mice ( | Loss of normal stromal structure with a disorganized network of epithelial cells ( | B cells organized into germinal center-like structures ( |
| T1D | Not studied | Not studied | NOD mice ( | Enlarged PVS ( | Increased number of B cells, plasma cells and TFH cells ( |
| Sjogren’s syndrome | Severe atrophy with formation of thymic epithelial cysts ( | Germinal centers associated to thymic epithelial cysts ( | IQI/ | Disorganized stromal network ( | Increased number of B cells ( |
| Ulcerative colitis | Not specified | Formation of lymphoid follicles ( | DSS induced colitis, Gαi2-/- mice ( | Acute thymic involution ( | Not studied |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | Thymic hyperplasia; low-grade B cell lymphoma ( | High density of B cells, germinal centers, plasma cells ( | – | – | – |