Malaria-induced interferon-γ drives the expansion of Tbethiatypical memory B cells

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Abstract

Many chronic infections, including malaria and HIV, are associated with a large expansion of CD21−CD27−‘atypical’ memory B cells (MBCs) that exhibit reduced B cell receptor (BCR) signaling and effector functions. Little is known about the conditions or transcriptional regulators driving atypical MBC differentiation. Here we show that atypical MBCs in malaria-exposed individuals highly express the transcription factor T-bet, and that T-bet expression correlates inversely with BCR signaling and skews toward IgG3 class switching. Moreover, a longitudinal analysis of a subset of children suggested a correlation between the incidence of febrile malaria and the expansion of T-bethiB cells. The Th1-cytokine containing supernatants of malaria-stimulated PBMCs plus BCR cross linking induced T-bet expression in naïve B cells that was abrogated by neutralizing IFN-γ or blocking the IFN-γ receptor on B cells. Accordingly, recombinant IFN-γ plus BCR cross-linking drove T-bet expression in peripheral and tonsillar B cells. Consistent with this, Th1-polarized Tfh (Tfh-1) cells more efficiently induced T-bet expression in naïve B cells. These data provide new insight into the mechanisms underlying atypical MBC differentiation.

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Obeng-Adjei, N., Portugal, S., Holla, P., Li, S., Sohn, H., Ambegaonkar, A., … Crompton, P. D. (2017). Malaria-induced interferon-γ drives the expansion of Tbethiatypical memory B cells. PLoS Pathogens, 13(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006576

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