Publication | Closed Access
Retinoic acid, acting as a highly specific IgA isotype switch factor, cooperates with TGF-β1 to enhance the overall IgA response
77
Citations
48
References
2013
Year
Human GrowthImmune RegulationImmunologyRetinoic AcidCell RegulationGut-organ AxisFibroblast Growth FactorCell SignalingIga SwitchingAutoimmune DiseaseSelf-toleranceHumoral ImmunityAutoimmunityImmune FunctionCell BiologyIga Switch FactorSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyMucosal ImmunologyImmune Cell DevelopmentOverall Iga ResponseRa ActivityMedicineCell Development
The present study demonstrates that RA has activity of an IgA switch factor and is more specific than TGF-β1. RA independently caused only IgA switching, whereas TGF-β1 caused IgA and IgG2b switching. We found that RA increased IgA production and that this was a result of its ability to increase the frequency of IgA-secreting B cell clones. Increased IgA production was accompanied by an increase of GLTα. RA activity was abrogated by an antagonist of the RAR. Additionally, RA affected intestinal IgA production in mice. Surprisingly, RA, in combination with TGF-β1, notably enhanced not only IgA production and GLTα expression but also CCR9 and α4β7 expression on B cells. These results suggest that RA selectively induces IgA isotype switching through RAR and that RA and TGF-β have important effects on the overall gut IgA antibody response.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1