Author
Listed:
- Ali Maisam Afzali
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology)
- Lucy Nirschl
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Christopher Sie
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Monika Pfaller
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Oleksii Ulianov
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Tobias Hassler
(Faculty of Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
- Christine Federle
(Faculty of Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
- Elisabetta Petrozziello
(Faculty of Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
- Sudhakar Reddy Kalluri
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Hsin Hsiang Chen
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Sofia Tyystjärvi
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Andreas Muschaweckh
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Katja Lammens
(Ludwig-Maximilians-University)
- Claire Delbridge
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Andreas Büttner
(Rostock University Medical Center)
- Katja Steiger
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Gönül Seyhan
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Ole Petter Ottersen
(University of Oslo)
- Rupert Öllinger
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Roland Rad
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Sebastian Jarosch
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Adrian Straub
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Anton Mühlbauer
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Simon Grassmann
(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)
- Bernhard Hemmer
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology)
- Jan P. Böttcher
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Ingrid Wagner
(Centre Médical Universitaire)
- Mario Kreutzfeldt
(Centre Médical Universitaire)
- Doron Merkler
(Centre Médical Universitaire)
- Irene Bonafonte Pardàs
(Helmholtz Munich)
- Marc Schmidt Supprian
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Veit R. Buchholz
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Sylvia Heink
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health)
- Dirk H. Busch
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner Site Munich)
- Ludger Klein
(Faculty of Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich)
- Thomas Korn
(Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Technical University of Munich School of Medicine and Health
Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology)
Abstract
Neuromyelitis optica is a paradigmatic autoimmune disease of the central nervous system, in which the water-channel protein AQP4 is the target antigen1. The immunopathology in neuromyelitis optica is largely driven by autoantibodies to AQP42. However, the T cell response that is required for the generation of these anti-AQP4 antibodies is not well understood. Here we show that B cells endogenously express AQP4 in response to activation with anti-CD40 and IL-21 and are able to present their endogenous AQP4 to T cells with an AQP4-specific T cell receptor (TCR). A population of thymic B cells emulates a CD40-stimulated B cell transcriptome, including AQP4 (in mice and humans), and efficiently purges the thymic TCR repertoire of AQP4-reactive clones. Genetic ablation of Aqp4 in B cells rescues AQP4-specific TCRs despite sufficient expression of AQP4 in medullary thymic epithelial cells, and B-cell-conditional AQP4-deficient mice are fully competent to raise AQP4-specific antibodies in productive germinal-centre responses. Thus, the negative selection of AQP4-specific thymocytes is dependent on the expression and presentation of AQP4 by thymic B cells. As AQP4 is expressed in B cells in a CD40-dependent (but not AIRE-dependent) manner, we propose that thymic B cells might tolerize against a group of germinal-centre-associated antigens, including disease-relevant autoantigens such as AQP4.
Suggested Citation
Ali Maisam Afzali & Lucy Nirschl & Christopher Sie & Monika Pfaller & Oleksii Ulianov & Tobias Hassler & Christine Federle & Elisabetta Petrozziello & Sudhakar Reddy Kalluri & Hsin Hsiang Chen & Sofia, 2024.
"B cells orchestrate tolerance to the neuromyelitis optica autoantigen AQP4,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 627(8003), pages 407-415, March.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:627:y:2024:i:8003:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07079-8
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07079-8
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