B cell peripheral tolerance is promoted by cathepsin B protease

Author:

Chou Marissa Y.12,Liu Dan12,An Jinping12,Xu Ying12,Cyster Jason G.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143

2. HHMI, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143

Abstract

B cells that bind soluble autoantigens receive chronic signaling via the B cell receptor (signal-1) in the absence of strong costimulatory signals (signal-2), and this leads to their elimination in peripheral tissues. The factors determining the extent of soluble autoantigen-binding B cell elimination are not fully understood. Here we demonstrate that the elimination of B cells chronically exposed to signal-1 is promoted by cathepsin B (Ctsb). Using hen egg lysozyme-specific (HEL-specific) immunoglobulin transgenic (MD4) B cells and mice harboring circulating HEL, we found improved survival and increased proliferation of HEL-binding B cells in Ctsb-deficient mice. Bone marrow chimera experiments established that both hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic sources of Ctsb were sufficient to promote peripheral B cell deletion. The depletion of CD4 + T cells overcame the survival and growth advantage provided by Ctsb deficiency, as did blocking CD40L or removing CD40 from the chronically antigen-engaged B cells. Thus, we suggest that Ctsb acts extracellularly to reduce soluble autoantigen-binding B cell survival and that its actions restrain CD40L-dependent pro-survival effects. These findings identify a role for cell-extrinsic protease activity in establishing a peripheral self-tolerance checkpoint.

Funder

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

HHS | NIH | NIAID | Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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