4.8 Article

Follicular regulatory T cells produce neuritin to regulate B cells

Journal

CELL
Volume 184, Issue 7, Pages 1775-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.02.027

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Elizabeth Blackburn Australian NHMRC fellowship [GNT1117812]
  2. NHMRC program [GNT1113577]
  3. HFSP program grant [RGP0033/2015]
  4. ANU DTF2.0 grant [DTF212]
  5. Elizabeth Greene Industry Award

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Regulatory T cells produce neuritin to suppress B cell-driven autoimmunity and IgE-mediated allergies. Lack of these T cells or neuritin leads to the emergence of autoantibodies and excessive IgE.
Regulatory T cells prevent the emergence of autoantibodies and excessive IgE, but the precise mechanisms are unclear. Here, we show that BCL6-expressing Tregs, known as follicular regulatory T (Tfr) cells, produce abundant neuritin protein that targets B cells. Mice lacking Tfr cells or neuritin in Foxp3-expressing cells accumulated early plasma cells in germinal centers (GCs) and developed autoantibodies against histones and tissue-specific self-antigens. Upon immunization, these mice also produced increased plasma IgE and IgG1. We show that neuritin is taken up by B cells, causes phosphorylation of numerous proteins, and dampens IgE class switching. Neuritin reduced differentiation of mouse and human GC B cells into plasma cells, downregulated BLIMP-1, and upregulated BCL6. Administration of neuritin to Tfr-deficient mice prevented the accumulation of early plasma cells in GCs. Production of neuritin by Tfr cells emerges as a central mechanism to suppress B cell-driven autoimmunity and IgE-mediated allergies.

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