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Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions

B cells regulate immune responses by producing antigen-specific antibody(1). However, specific B cell subsets can also negatively regulate immune responses, validating the existence of regulatory B cells(2–4). Human and mouse regulatory B cells (B10 cells) with the ability to express the inhibitory...

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Autores principales: Yoshizaki, Ayumi, Miyagaki, Tomomitsu, DiLillo, David J., Matsushita, Takashi, Horikawa, Mayuka, Kountikov, Evgueni I., Spolski, Rosanne, Poe, Jonathan C., Leonard, Warren J., Tedder, Thomas F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3493692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23064231
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11501
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author Yoshizaki, Ayumi
Miyagaki, Tomomitsu
DiLillo, David J.
Matsushita, Takashi
Horikawa, Mayuka
Kountikov, Evgueni I.
Spolski, Rosanne
Poe, Jonathan C.
Leonard, Warren J.
Tedder, Thomas F.
author_facet Yoshizaki, Ayumi
Miyagaki, Tomomitsu
DiLillo, David J.
Matsushita, Takashi
Horikawa, Mayuka
Kountikov, Evgueni I.
Spolski, Rosanne
Poe, Jonathan C.
Leonard, Warren J.
Tedder, Thomas F.
author_sort Yoshizaki, Ayumi
collection PubMed
description B cells regulate immune responses by producing antigen-specific antibody(1). However, specific B cell subsets can also negatively regulate immune responses, validating the existence of regulatory B cells(2–4). Human and mouse regulatory B cells (B10 cells) with the ability to express the inhibitory cytokine IL-10 have been identified(2–5). Although rare, B10 cells are potent negative regulators of antigen-specific inflammation and T cell-dependent autoimmune diseases in mice(5–7). How B10 cell IL-10 production and regulation of antigen-specific immune responses are controlled in vivo without inducing systemic immunosuppression are unknown. Using a mouse model for multiple sclerosis, we show here that B10 cell maturation into functional IL-10-secreting effector cells that inhibit in vivo autoimmune disease requires IL-21 and CD40-dependent cognate interactions with T cells. Moreover, the ex vivo provision of CD40 and IL-21 receptor signals can drive B10 cell development and expansion by four-million-fold and generate B10 effector cells producing IL-10 that dramatically inhibit disease symptoms when transferred into mice with established autoimmune disease. Thereby, the ex vivo expansion and reinfusion of autologous B10 cells may provide a novel and effective in vivo treatment for severe autoimmune diseases that are resistant to current therapies.
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spelling pubmed-34936922013-05-08 Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions Yoshizaki, Ayumi Miyagaki, Tomomitsu DiLillo, David J. Matsushita, Takashi Horikawa, Mayuka Kountikov, Evgueni I. Spolski, Rosanne Poe, Jonathan C. Leonard, Warren J. Tedder, Thomas F. Nature Article B cells regulate immune responses by producing antigen-specific antibody(1). However, specific B cell subsets can also negatively regulate immune responses, validating the existence of regulatory B cells(2–4). Human and mouse regulatory B cells (B10 cells) with the ability to express the inhibitory cytokine IL-10 have been identified(2–5). Although rare, B10 cells are potent negative regulators of antigen-specific inflammation and T cell-dependent autoimmune diseases in mice(5–7). How B10 cell IL-10 production and regulation of antigen-specific immune responses are controlled in vivo without inducing systemic immunosuppression are unknown. Using a mouse model for multiple sclerosis, we show here that B10 cell maturation into functional IL-10-secreting effector cells that inhibit in vivo autoimmune disease requires IL-21 and CD40-dependent cognate interactions with T cells. Moreover, the ex vivo provision of CD40 and IL-21 receptor signals can drive B10 cell development and expansion by four-million-fold and generate B10 effector cells producing IL-10 that dramatically inhibit disease symptoms when transferred into mice with established autoimmune disease. Thereby, the ex vivo expansion and reinfusion of autologous B10 cells may provide a novel and effective in vivo treatment for severe autoimmune diseases that are resistant to current therapies. 2012-10-14 2012-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3493692/ /pubmed/23064231 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11501 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Yoshizaki, Ayumi
Miyagaki, Tomomitsu
DiLillo, David J.
Matsushita, Takashi
Horikawa, Mayuka
Kountikov, Evgueni I.
Spolski, Rosanne
Poe, Jonathan C.
Leonard, Warren J.
Tedder, Thomas F.
Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title_full Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title_fullStr Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title_short Regulatory B Cells Control T Cell Autoimmunity Through IL-21-Dependent Cognate Interactions
title_sort regulatory b cells control t cell autoimmunity through il-21-dependent cognate interactions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3493692/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23064231
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11501
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