The aryl hydrocarbon receptor controls cell-fate decisions in B cells

Generation of cellular heterogeneity is an essential feature of the adaptive immune system. This is best exemplified during humoral immune response when an expanding B cell clone assumes multiple cell fates, including class-switched B cells, antibody-secreting plasma cells, and memory B cells. Altho...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of experimental medicine 2017-01, Vol.214 (1), p.197-208
Hauptverfasser: Vaidyanathan, Bharat, Chaudhry, Ashutosh, Yewdell, William T, Angeletti, Davide, Yen, Wei-Feng, Wheatley, Adam K, Bradfield, Christopher A, McDermott, Adrian B, Yewdell, Jonathan W, Rudensky, Alexander Y, Chaudhuri, Jayanta
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Generation of cellular heterogeneity is an essential feature of the adaptive immune system. This is best exemplified during humoral immune response when an expanding B cell clone assumes multiple cell fates, including class-switched B cells, antibody-secreting plasma cells, and memory B cells. Although each cell type is essential for immunity, their generation must be exquisitely controlled because a class-switched B cell cannot revert back to the parent isotype, and a terminally differentiated plasma cell cannot contribute to the memory pool. In this study, we show that an environmental sensor, the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is highly induced upon B cell activation and serves a critical role in regulating activation-induced cell fate outcomes. We find that AhR negatively regulates class-switch recombination ex vivo by altering activation-induced cytidine deaminase expression. We further demonstrate that AhR suppresses class switching in vivo after influenza virus infection and immunization with model antigens. In addition, by regulating Blimp-1 expression via Bach2, AhR represses differentiation of B cells into plasmablasts ex vivo and antibody-secreting plasma cells in vivo. These experiments suggest that AhR serves as a molecular rheostat in B cells to brake the effector response, possibly to facilitate optimal recall responses. Thus, AhR might represent a novel molecular target for manipulation of B cell responses during vaccination.
ISSN:0022-1007
1540-9538
1540-9538
DOI:10.1084/jem.20160789