Aberrant IgM Signaling Promotes Survival of Transitional T1 B Cells and Prevents Tolerance Induction in Lupus-Prone New Zealand Black Mice

  • Roy V
  • Chang N
  • Cai Y
  • et al.
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Abstract

New Zealand Black (NZB) mice develop a lupus-like syndrome. Although the precise immune defects leading to autoantibody production in these mice have not been characterized, they possess a number of immunologic abnormalities suggesting that B cell tolerance may be defective. In the bone marrow, immature self-reactive B cells that have failed to edit their receptors undergo apoptosis as a consequence of Ig receptor engagement. Splenic transitional T1 B cells are recent bone marrow emigrants that retain these signaling properties, ensuring that B cells recognizing self-Ags expressed only in the periphery are deleted from the naive B cell repertoire. In this study we report that this mechanism of tolerance is defective in NZB mice. We show that NZB T1 B cells are resistant to apoptosis after IgM cross-linking in vitro. Although extensive IgM cross-linking usually leads to deletion of T1 B cells, in NZB T1 B cells we found that it prevents mitochondrial membrane damage, inhibits activation of caspase-3, and promotes cell survival. Increased survival of NZB T1 B cells was associated with aberrant up-regulation of Bcl-2 after Ig receptor engagement. We also show that there is a markedly increased proportion of NZB T1 B cells that express elevated levels of Bcl-2 in vivo and provide evidence that up-regulation of Bcl-2 follows encounter with self-Ag in vivo. Thus, we propose that aberrant cell signaling in NZB T1 B cells leads to the survival of autoreactive B cells, which predisposes NZB mice to the development of autoimmunity.

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Roy, V., Chang, N.-H., Cai, Y., Bonventi, G., & Wither, J. (2005). Aberrant IgM Signaling Promotes Survival of Transitional T1 B Cells and Prevents Tolerance Induction in Lupus-Prone New Zealand Black Mice. The Journal of Immunology, 175(11), 7363–7371. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.175.11.7363

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