Shift in the B cell subsets between children with type 1 diabetes and/or celiac disease

Author:

Tompa Andrea12ORCID,Faresjö Maria3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural Science and Biomedicine, School of Health and Welfare, Jönköping University , Jönköping , Sweden

2. Division of Diagnostics , Region Jönköping County, Jönköping , Sweden

3. Department of Life Sciences, Division of Systems and Synthetic Biology, Chalmers University of Technology , Gothenburg , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Our purpose was to characterize the pattern of B cell subsets in children with a combined diagnosis of type 1 diabetes (T1D) and celiac disease (C) since children with single or double diagnosis of these autoimmune diseases may differ in peripheral B cell subset phenotype patterns. B cells were analyzed with flow cytometry for the expression of differentiation/maturation markers to identify transitional, naive, and memory B cells. Transitional (CD24hiCD38hiCD19+) and memory Bregs (mBregs; CD24hiCD27+CD19+, CD1d+CD27+CD19+, and CD5+CD1d+CD19+) were classified as B cells with regulatory capacity. Children with a combined diagnosis of T1D and C showed a pattern of diminished peripheral B cell subsets. The B cells compartment in children with combined diagnosis had higher percentages of memory B subsets and Bregs, including activated subsets, compared to children with either T1D or C. Children with combined diagnosis had a lower percentage of naive B cells (CD27−CD19+; IgD+CD19+) and an increased percentage of memory B cells (CD27+CD19+; IgD−CD19+). A similar alteration was seen among the CD39+ expressing naive and memory B cells. Memory Bregs (CD1d+CD27+CD19+) were more frequent, contrary to the lower percentage of CD5+ transitional Bregs in children with a combined diagnosis. In children with either T1D or C, the peripheral B cell compartment was dominated by naive cells. Differences in the pattern of heterogeneous peripheral B cell repertoire subsets reflect a shifting in the B cell compartment between children with T1D and/or C. This is an immunological challenge of impact on the pathophysiology of these autoimmune diseases.

Funder

FUTURUM

Region Jönköping County, Jönköping, Sweden

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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