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Circulating Human CD27−IgA+ Memory B Cells Recognize Bacteria with Polyreactive Igs
Author(s) -
Magdalena A. Berkowska,
Jean-Nicolas Schickel,
Christina Großerichter-Wagener,
Dick de Ridder,
Yen Shing Ng,
Jacques J. M. van Dongen,
Eric Meffre,
Menno C. van Zelm
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1402708
Subject(s) - downregulation and upregulation , biology , b cell , immunoglobulin a , antibody , immunology , naive b cell , gene , memory b cell , cell , microbiology and biotechnology , immunoglobulin g , t cell , immune system , genetics , antigen presenting cell
The vast majority of IgA production occurs in mucosal tissue following T cell-dependent and T cell-independent Ag responses. To study the nature of each of these responses, we analyzed the gene-expression and Ig-reactivity profiles of T cell-dependent CD27(+)IgA(+) and T cell-independent CD27(-)IgA(+) circulating memory B cells. Gene-expression profiles of IgA(+) subsets were highly similar to each other and to IgG(+) memory B cell subsets, with typical upregulation of activation markers and downregulation of inhibitory receptors. However, we identified the mucosa-associated CCR9 and RUNX2 genes to be specifically upregulated in CD27(-)IgA(+) B cells. We also found that CD27(-)IgA(+) B cells expressed Abs with distinct Ig repertoire and reactivity compared with those from CD27(+)IgA(+) B cells. Indeed, Abs from CD27(-)IgA(+) B cells were weakly mutated, often used Igλ chain, and were enriched in polyreactive clones recognizing various bacterial species. Hence, T cell-independent IgA responses are likely involved in the maintenance of gut homeostasis through the production of polyreactive mutated IgA Abs with cross-reactive anti-commensal reactivity.

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