Deletion of IgG-Switched Autoreactive B Cells and Defects in Faslpr Lupus Mice

  • Aït-Azzouzene D
  • Kono D
  • Gonzalez-Quintial R
  • et al.
26Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

During a T cell-dependent Ab response, B cells undergo Ab class switching and V region hypermutation, with the latter process potentially rendering previously innocuous B cells autoreactive. Class switching and hypermutation are temporally and anatomically linked with both processes dependent on the enzyme, activation-induced deaminase, and occurring principally, but not exclusively, in germinal centers. To understand tolerance regulation at this stage, we generated a new transgenic mouse model expressing a membrane-tethered γ2a-reactive superantigen (γ2a-macroself Ag) and assessed the fate of emerging IgG2a-expressing B cells that have, following class switch, acquired self-reactivity of the Ag receptor to the macroself-Ag. In normal mice, self-reactive IgG2a-switched B cells were deleted, leading to the selective absence of IgG2a memory responses. These findings identify a novel negative selection mechanism for deleting mature B cells that acquire reactivity to self-Ag. This process was only partly dependent on the Bcl-2 pathway, but markedly inefficient in MRL-Faslpr lupus mice, suggesting that defective apoptosis of isotype-switched autoreactive B cells is central to Fas mutation-associated systemic autoimmunity.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Aït-Azzouzene, D., Kono, D. H., Gonzalez-Quintial, R., McHeyzer-Williams, L. J., Lim, M., Wickramarachchi, D., … Theofilopoulos, A. N. (2010). Deletion of IgG-Switched Autoreactive B Cells and Defects in Faslpr Lupus Mice. The Journal of Immunology, 185(2), 1015–1027. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1000698

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free