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Publication | Open Access

Distinct Effector Cytokine Profiles of Memory and Naive Human B Cell Subsets and Implication in Multiple Sclerosis

637

Citations

41

References

2007

Year

TLDR

Human B cells and their subsets are poorly understood regarding their non‑antibody functions in health and disease. The study seeks to confirm that normal human B cells produce context‑dependent cytokines and to model distinct roles for naive and memory subsets in immune regulation and autoimmunity. In multiple sclerosis, B cells exhibit a dysregulated cytokine network with reduced IL‑10, while naive and memory subsets produce distinct cytokines, a switch that can be modulated by therapies such as mitoxantrone.

Abstract

Abstract Although recent animal studies have fuelled growing interest in Ab-independent functions of B cells, relatively little is known about how human B cells and their subsets may contribute to the regulation of immune responses in either health or disease. In this study, we first confirm that effector cytokine production by normal human B cells is context dependent and demonstrate that this involves the reciprocal regulation of proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines. We further report that this cytokine network is dysregulated in patients with the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis, whose B cells exhibit a decreased average production of the down-regulatory cytokine IL-10. Treatment with the approved chemotherapeutic agent mitoxantrone reciprocally modulated B cell proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines, establishing that the B cell cytokine network can be targeted in vivo. Prospective studies of human B cells reconstituting following in vivo depletion suggested that different B cell subsets produced distinct effector cytokines. We confirmed in normal human B cell subsets that IL-10 is produced almost exclusively by naive B cells while the proinflammatory cytokines lymphotoxin and TNF-α are largely produced by memory B cells. These results point to an in vivo switch in the cytokine “program” of human B cells transitioning from the naive pool to the memory pool. We propose a model that ascribes distinct and proactive roles to memory and naive human B cell subsets in the regulation of memory immune responses and in autoimmunity. Our findings are of particular relevance at a time when B cell directed therapies are being applied to clinical trials of several autoimmune diseases.

References

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