Antigen-presenting autoreactive B cells activate regulatory T cells and suppress autoimmune arthritis in mice

B cells undergo several rounds of selection to eliminate potentially pathogenic autoreactive clones, but in contrast to T cells, evidence of positive selection of autoreactive B cells remains moot. Using unique tetramers, we traced natural autoreactive B cells (C1-B) specific for a defined triple-he...

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Veröffentlicht in:JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE 2023-11, Vol.220 (11)
Hauptverfasser: Aoun, Mike, Coelho, Ana, Krämer, Alexander, Saxena, Amit, Sabatier, Pierre, Beusch, Christian Michel, Lönnblom, Erik, Geng, Manman, Do, Nhu-Nguyen, Xu, Zhongwei, Zhang, Jingdian, He, Yibo, Romero Castillo, Laura, Abolhassani, Hassan, Xu, Bingze, Viljanen, Johan, Rorbach, Joanna, Fernandez Lahore, Gonzalo, Gjertsson, Inger, Kastbom, Alf, Sjöwall, Christopher, Kihlberg, Jan, Zubarev, Roman A, Burkhardt, Harald, Holmdahl, Rikard
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:B cells undergo several rounds of selection to eliminate potentially pathogenic autoreactive clones, but in contrast to T cells, evidence of positive selection of autoreactive B cells remains moot. Using unique tetramers, we traced natural autoreactive B cells (C1-B) specific for a defined triple-helical epitope on collagen type-II (COL2), constituting a sizeable fraction of the physiological B cell repertoire in mice, rats, and humans. Adoptive transfer of C1-B suppressed arthritis independently of IL10, separating them from IL10-secreting regulatory B cells. Single-cell sequencing revealed an antigen processing and presentation signature, including induced expression of CD72 and CCR7 as surface markers. C1-B presented COL2 to T cells and induced the expansion of regulatory T cells in a contact-dependent manner. CD72 blockade impeded this effect suggesting a new downstream suppressor mechanism that regulates antigen-specific T cell tolerization. Thus, our results indicate that autoreactive antigen-specific naïve B cells tolerize infiltrating T cells against self-antigens to impede the development of tissue-specific autoimmune inflammation.
ISSN:0022-1007
1540-9538
1540-9538
DOI:10.1084/jem.20230101