| Literature DB >> 34845392 |
Andrea Di Pietro1,2, Jack Polmear1,2, Lucy Cooper1,2, Timon Damelang3, Tabinda Hussain1,2, Lauren Hailes1,2, Kristy O'Donnell4, Vibha Udupa2,3,5, Tian Mi6, Simon Preston7,8, Areen Shtewe9, Uri Hershberg9, Stephen J Turner2,5, Nicole L La Gruta1,2, Amy W Chung3, David M Tarlinton4, Christopher D Scharer6, Kim L Good-Jacobson10,11.
Abstract
Ineffective antibody-mediated responses are a key characteristic of chronic viral infection. However, our understanding of the intrinsic mechanisms that drive this dysregulation are unclear. Here, we identify that targeting the epigenetic modifier BMI-1 in mice improves humoral responses to chronic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus. BMI-1 was upregulated by germinal center B cells in chronic viral infection, correlating with changes to the accessible chromatin landscape, compared to acute infection. B cell-intrinsic deletion of Bmi1 accelerated viral clearance, reduced splenomegaly and restored splenic architecture. Deletion of Bmi1 restored c-Myc expression in B cells, concomitant with improved quality of antibody and coupled with reduced antibody-secreting cell numbers. Specifically, BMI-1-deficiency induced antibody with increased neutralizing capacity and enhanced antibody-dependent effector function. Using a small molecule inhibitor to murine BMI-1, we could deplete antibody-secreting cells and prohibit detrimental immune complex formation in vivo. This study defines BMI-1 as a crucial immune modifier that controls antibody-mediated responses in chronic infection.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34845392 DOI: 10.1038/s41590-021-01077-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Immunol ISSN: 1529-2908 Impact factor: 25.606