Persistent expression of autoantibodies in SLE patients in remission

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Abstract

A majority of the antibodies expressed by nascent B cells in healthy humans are self-reactive, but most of these antibodies are removed from the repertoire during B cell development. In contrast, untreated systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients fail to remove many of the self-reactive and polyreactive antibodies from the naive repertoire. Here, we report that SLE patients in clinical remission continue to produce elevated numbers of self-reactive and polyreactive antibodies in the mature naive B cell compartment, but the number of B cells expressing these antibodies is lower than in patients with active disease. Our finding that abnormal levels of self-reactive mature naive B cells persist in the majority of patients in clinical remission suggests that early checkpoint abnormalities are an integral feature of SLE. JEM © The Rockefeller University Press.

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Yurasov, S., Tiller, T., Tsuiji, M., Velinzon, K., Pascual, V., Wardemann, H., & Nussenzweig, M. C. (2006). Persistent expression of autoantibodies in SLE patients in remission. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 203(10), 2255–2261. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20061446

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