4.7 Article

WASp-deficient B cells play a critical, cell-intrinsic role in triggering autoimmunity

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JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
卷 208, 期 10, 页码 2033-2042

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ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20110200

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [HD037091, AI071163, DK76126, AI40305, AI46637, 5T32AR007108-32]
  2. ACR Research Education Foundation
  3. Arthritis Foundation
  4. PIDTC
  5. Cancer Research Institute

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Patients with the immunodeficiency Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) frequently develop systemic autoimmunity. Here, we demonstrate that mutation of the WAS gene results in B cells that are hyperresponsive to B cell receptor and Toll-like receptor (TLR) signals in vitro, thereby promoting a B cell-intrinsic break in tolerance. Whereas this defect leads to autoantibody production in WAS protein-deficient (WASp(-/-)) mice without overt disease, chimeric mice in which only the B cell lineage lacks WASp exhibit severe autoimmunity characterized by spontaneous germinal center formation, class-switched autoantibodies, renal histopathology, and early mortality. Both T cell help and B cell-intrinsic TLR engagement play important roles in promoting disease in this model, as depletion with anti-CD4 antibodies or generation of chimeric mice with B cells deficient in both WASp and MyD88 prevented development of autoimmune disease. These data highlight the potentially harmful role for cell-intrinsic loss of B cell tolerance in the setting of normal T cell function, and may explain why WAS patients with mixed chimerism after stem cell transplantation often develop severe humoral autoimmunity.

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