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Heparan sulfate regulates IL-21 bioavailability and signal strength that control germinal center B cell selection and differentiation

46

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72

References

2023

Year

Abstract

In antibody responses, mutated germinal center B (B<sub>GC</sub>) cells are positively selected for reentry or differentiation. As the products from GCs, memory B cells and antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) support high-affinity and long-lasting immunity. Positive selection of B<sub>GC</sub> cells is controlled by signals received through the B cell receptor (BCR) and follicular helper T (T<sub>FH</sub>) cell-derived signals, in particular costimulation through CD40. Here, we demonstrate that the T<sub>FH</sub> cell effector cytokine interleukin-21 (IL-21) joins BCR and CD40 in supporting B<sub>GC</sub> selection and reveal that strong IL-21 signaling prioritizes ASC differentiation in vivo. B<sub>GC</sub> cells, compared with non-B<sub>GC</sub> cells, show significantly reduced IL-21 binding and attenuated signaling, which is mediated by low cellular heparan sulfate (HS) sulfation. Mechanistically, N-deacetylase and N-sulfotransferase 1 (Ndst1)-mediated N-sulfation of HS in B cells promotes IL-21 binding and signal strength. Ndst1 is down-regulated in B<sub>GC</sub> cells and up-regulated in ASC precursors, suggesting selective desensitization to IL-21 in B<sub>GC</sub> cells. Thus, specialized biochemical regulation of IL-21 bioavailability and signal strength sets a balance between the stringency and efficiency of GC selection.

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