The Lupus Susceptibility Locus Sle1 Facilitates the Peripheral Development and Selection of Anti-DNA B Cells through Impaired Receptor Editing

  • Chang S
  • Kim T
  • Kim Y
  • et al.
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Abstract

Systemic lupus erythematosus is characterized by the spontaneous production of IgG autoantibodies in patients and lupus-prone mice. In this study, we investigated the effect of the Sle1 lupus susceptibility locus on the peripheral development of 56R+ anti-DNA transgenic B cells by tracking 56R+ B cells in mice without (B6.56R) or with (B6.Sle1.56R) the Sle1 locus. Compared with B6.56R mice, B6.Sle1.56R mice exhibited increased class-switched IgG2a anti-DNA Abs in their serum, encoded by the transgene. Interestingly, within the spleen, Sle1 facilitated the development of these cells into clusters of IgG2a class-switched B cells juxtaposed to CD4+ T cells within extrafollicular sites. Through sequence analysis of B cell hybridomas, we also found that B cells from B6.Sle1.56R mice are inefficient at Ig H and L chain editing. Thus, the Ig H chains in Sle1.56R+ B cells are partnered more often with cationic L chains that facilitate DNA binding. Taken together, these findings indicate that the Sle1 lupus-susceptibility locus may facilitate the emergence of anti-DNA B cells by subduing BCR revision and possibly by shaping the extrafollicular development of effector B cells, although the precise molecular mechanisms await further study.

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Chang, S.-H., Kim, T.-J., Kim, Y.-J., Liu, Y., Min, S.-Y., Park, M.-J., … Kim, H.-R. (2014). The Lupus Susceptibility Locus Sle1 Facilitates the Peripheral Development and Selection of Anti-DNA B Cells through Impaired Receptor Editing. The Journal of Immunology, 192(12), 5579–5585. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1201558

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