Naive B cells generate regulatory T cells in the presence of a mature immunologic synapse

Author:

Reichardt Peter1,Dornbach Bastian1,Rong Song2,Beissert Stefan3,Gueler Faikah2,Loser Karin3,Gunzer Matthias1

Affiliation:

1. Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research (HZI), Junior Research Group Immunodynamics, Braunschweig;

2. Department of Nephrology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover; and

3. Department of Dermatology and Interdisciplinary Center of Clinical Research (IZKF), University of Münster, Münster, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Naive B cells are ineffective antigen-presenting cells and are considered unable to activate naive T cells. However, antigen-specific contact of these cells leads to stable cell pairs that remain associated over hours in vivo. The physiologic role of such pairs has not been evaluated. We show here that antigen-specific conjugates between naive B cells and naive T cells display a mature immunologic synapse in the contact zone that is absent in T-cell–dendritic-cell (DC) pairs. B cells induce substantial proliferation but, contrary to DCs, no loss of L-selectin in T cells. Surprisingly, while DC-triggered T cells develop into normal effector cells, B-cell stimulation over 72 hours induces regulatory T cells inhibiting priming of fresh T cells in a contact-dependent manner in vitro. In vivo, the regulatory T cells home to lymph nodes where they potently suppress immune responses such as in cutaneous hypersensitivity and ectopic allogeneic heart transplant rejection. Our finding might help to explain old observations on tolerance induction by B cells, identify the mature immunologic synapse as a central functional module of this process, and suggest the use of naive B-cell–primed regulatory T cells, “bTregs,” as a useful approach for therapeutic intervention in adverse adaptive immune responses.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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