Abstract
Excessive self-reactive and inadequate affinity-matured antigen-specific antibody responses have been reported to coexist in lupus, with elusive cellular and molecular mechanisms. Here, we report that the antigen-specific germinal center (GC) response―a process critical for antibody affinity maturation―is compromised in murine lupus models. Importantly, this defect can be triggered by excessive autoimmunity-relevant CD11c+Tbet+age-associated B cells (ABCs). In B cell-intrinsic Ship-deficient (ShipΔB) lupus mice, excessive CD11c+Tbet+ABCs induce deregulated follicular T-helper (TFH) cell differentiation through their potent antigen-presenting function and consequently compromise affinity-based GC selection. Excessive CD11c+Tbet+ABCs and deregulated TFHcell are also present in other lupus models and patients. Further, over-activated Toll-like receptor signaling in Ship-deficient B cells is critical for CD11c+Tbet+ABC differentiation, and blocking CD11c+Tbet+ABC differentiation in ShipΔB mice by ablating MyD88 normalizes TFHcell differentiation and rescues antigen-specific GC responses, as well as prevents autoantibody production. Our study suggests that excessive CD11c+Tbet+ABCs not only contribute significantly to autoantibody production but also compromise antigen-specific GC B-cell responses and antibody-affinity maturation, providing a cellular link between the coexisting autoantibodies and inadequate affinity-matured antigen-specific antibodies in lupus models and a potential target for treating lupus.
Funder
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
69 articles.
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