B-Cell Compartmental Features and Molecular Basis for Therapy in Autoimmune Disease

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Abstract

Background and ObjectivesTo assess the molecular landscape of B-cell subpopulations across different compartments in patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (NMOSD).MethodsWe performed B-cell transcriptomic profiles via single-cell RNA sequencing across CSF, blood, and bone marrow in patients with NMOSD.ResultsAcross the tissue types tested, 4 major subpopulations of B cells with distinct signatures were identified: naive B cells, memory B cells, age-Associated B cells, and antibody-secreting cells (ASCs). NMOSD B cells show proinflammatory activity and increased expression of chemokine receptor genes (CXCR3 and CXCR4). Circulating B cells display an increase of antigen presentation markers (CD40 and CD83), as well as activation signatures (FOS, CD69, and JUN). In contrast, the bone marrow B-cell population contains a large ASC fraction with increased oxidative and metabolic activity reflected by COX genes and ATP synthase genes. Typically, NMOSD B cells become hyperresponsive to type I interferon, which facilitates B-cell maturation and anti-Aquaporin-4 autoantibody production. The pool of ASCs in blood and CSF were significantly elevated in NMOSD. Both CD19- and CD19+ ASCs could be ablated by tocilizumab, but not rituximab treatment in NMOSD.DiscussionB cells are compartmentally fine tuned toward autoreactivity in NMOSD and become hyperreactive to type I interferon. Inhibition of type I interferon pathway may provide a new therapeutic avenue for NMOSD.

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APA

Zhang, C., Zhang, T. X., Liu, Y., Jia, D., Zeng, P., Du, C., … Shi, F. D. (2021). B-Cell Compartmental Features and Molecular Basis for Therapy in Autoimmune Disease. Neurology: Neuroimmunology and NeuroInflammation, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.1212/NXI.0000000000001070

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