4.7 Article

Plasma cells require autophagy for sustainable immunoglobulin production

Journal

NATURE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 298-305

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/ni.2524

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Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health [1143560]
  2. Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation
  3. Italian Association for Cancer Research [9965]
  4. Giovanni Armenise-Harvard Foundation Career Development Program
  5. Italian Foundation for Cancer Research

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The role of autophagy in plasma cells is unknown. Here we found notable autophagic activity in both differentiating and long-lived plasma cells and investigated its function through the use of mice with conditional deficiency in the essential autophagic molecule Atg5 in B cells. Atg5(-/-) differentiating plasma cells had a larger endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and more ER stress signaling than did their wild-type counterparts, which led to higher expression of the transcriptional repressor Blimp-1 and immunoglobulins and more antibody secretion. The enhanced immunoglobulin synthesis was associated with less intracellular ATP and more death of mutant plasma cells, which identified an unsuspected autophagy-dependent cytoprotective trade-off between immunoglobulin synthesis and viability. In vivo, mice with conditional deficiency in Atg5 in B cells had defective antibody responses, complete selection in the bone marrow for plasma cells that escaped Atg5 deletion and fewer antigen-specific long-lived bone marrow plasma cells than did wild-type mice, despite having normal germinal center responses. Thus, autophagy is specifically required for plasma cell homeostasis and long-lived humoral immunity.

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