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Mutual inhibition between Prkd2 and Bcl6 controls T follicular helper cell differentiation.

Takuma MisawaJeffrey A SoRelleJin Huk ChoiTao YueKuan-Wen WangWilliam McAlpineJianhui WangAijie LiuKoichi TabetaEmre E TurerBret M EversEvan Nair-GillSubhajit PoddarLijing SuFeiya OuLiyang YuJamie RussellSara LudwigXiaoming ZhanSara HildebrandXiaohong LiMiao TangAnne R MurrayEva Marie Y MorescoBruce A Beutler
Published in: Science immunology (2020)
T follicular helper cells (TFH) participate in germinal center (GC) development and are necessary for B cell production of high-affinity, isotype-switched antibodies. In a forward genetic screen, we identified a missense mutation in Prkd2, encoding the serine/threonine kinase protein kinase D2, which caused elevated titers of immunoglobulin E (IgE) in the serum. Subsequent analysis of serum antibodies in mice with a targeted null mutation of Prkd2 demonstrated polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia of IgE, IgG1, and IgA isotypes, which was exacerbated by the T cell-dependent humoral response to immunization. GC formation and GC B cells were increased in Prkd2-/- spleens. These effects were the result of excessive cell-autonomous TFH development caused by unrestricted Bcl6 nuclear translocation in Prkd2-/- CD4+ T cells. Prkd2 directly binds to Bcl6, and Prkd2-dependent phosphorylation of Bcl6 is necessary to constrain Bcl6 to the cytoplasm, thereby limiting TFH development. In response to immunization, Bcl6 repressed Prkd2 expression in CD4+ T cells, thereby committing them to TFH development. Thus, Prkd2 and Bcl6 form a mutually inhibitory positive feedback loop that controls the stable transition from naïve CD4+ T cells to TFH during the adaptive immune response.
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