Publication | Open Access
A switch from canonical to noncanonical autophagy shapes B cell responses
105
Citations
26
References
2017
Year
MitophagyB Cell StimulationHumoral ResponseImmunologyB Cell ActivationImmunotherapyCellular PhysiologyCell AutophagyAutophagyLipophagyB Cell DifferentiationCell SignalingImmunological MemoryAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityCell BiologySignal TransductionAutoantibody ProductionCellular StructureCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicineViral Immunity
Autophagy is important in a variety of cellular and pathophysiological situations; however, its role in immune responses remains elusive. Here, we show that among B cells, germinal center (GC) cells exhibited the highest rate of autophagy during viral infection. In contrast to mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1-dependent canonical autophagy, GC B cell autophagy occurred predominantly through a noncanonical pathway. B cell stimulation was sufficient to down-regulate canonical autophagy transiently while triggering noncanonical autophagy. Genetic ablation of WD repeat domain, phosphoinositide-interacting protein 2 in B cells alone enhanced this noncanonical autophagy, resulting in changes of mitochondrial homeostasis and alterations in GC and antibody-secreting cells. Thus, B cell activation prompts a temporal switch from canonical to noncanonical autophagy that is important in controlling B cell differentiation and fate.
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