4.3 Article

B cell biology: implications for treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus

Journal

LUPUS
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 342-349

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0961203312471576

Keywords

B cells; autoimmunity; systemic lupus erythematosus

Categories

Funding

  1. U19 Autoimmunity Center of Excellence [AI563262-06]
  2. Lupus Foundation of American
  3. Lupus Research Institute
  4. Amgen Pharmaceuticals
  5. Genentech
  6. Karyopharm
  7. Proteolix
  8. Vaccinex
  9. [R01 AI077674-01]
  10. [P01 AI1078907-01]

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B cells are critical players in the orchestration of properly regulated immune responses, normally providing protective immunity without autoimmunity. Balance in the B cell compartment is achieved through the finely regulated participation of multiple B cell populations with different antibody-dependent and independent functions. Both types of functions allow B cells to modulate other components of the innate and adaptive immune system. Autoantibody-independent B cell functions include antigen presentation, T cell activation and polarization, and dendritic cell modulation. Several of these functions are mediated by the ability of B cells to produce immunoregulatory cytokines and chemokines and by their critical contribution to lymphoid tissue development and organization including the development of ectopic tertiary lymphoid tissue. Additionally, the functional versatility of B cells enables them to play either protective or pathogenic roles in autoimmunity. In turn, B cell dysfunction has been critically implicated in the pathophysiology of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a complex disease characterized by the production of autoantibodies and heterogeneous clinical involvement. Thus, the breakdown of B cell tolerance is a defining and early event in the disease process and may occur by multiple pathways, including alterations in factors that affect B cell activation thresholds, B cell longevity, and apoptotic cell processing. Once tolerance is broken, autoantibodies contribute to autoimmunity by multiple mechanisms including immune-complex mediated Type III hypersensitivity reactions, type II antibody-dependent cytotoxicity, and by instructing innate immune cells to produce pathogenic cytokines including IFN alpha, TNF and IL-1. The complexity of B cell functions has been highlighted by the variable success of B cell-targeted therapies in multiple autoimmune diseases, including those conventionally viewed as T cell-mediated conditions. Given the widespread utilization of B cell depletion therapy in autoimmune diseases and the need for new therapeutic approaches in SLE, a better understanding of human B cell subsets and the balance of pathogenic and regulatory functions is of the essence. Lupus (2013) 22, 342-349.

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