Dynamic regulation of B cell complement signaling is integral to germinal center responses.
Arun CumpelikDavid HejaYuan HuGabriele VaranoFarideh OrdikhaniMark P RobertoZhengxiang HeDirk HomannSergio A LiraDavid Dominguez-SolaPeter S HeegerPublished in: Nature immunology (2021)
Maturation of B cells within germinal centers (GCs) generates diversified B cell pools and high-affinity B cell antigen receptors (BCRs) for pathogen clearance. Increased receptor affinity is achieved by iterative cycles of T cell-dependent, affinity-based B cell positive selection and clonal expansion by mechanisms hitherto incompletely understood. Here we found that, as part of a physiologic program, GC B cells repressed expression of decay-accelerating factor (DAF/CD55) and other complement C3 convertase regulators via BCL6, but increased the expression of C5b-9 inhibitor CD59. These changes permitted C3 cleavage on GC B cell surfaces without the formation of membrane attack complex and activated C3a- and C5a-receptor signals required for positive selection. Genetic disruption of this pathway in antigen-activated B cells by conditional transgenic DAF overexpression or deletion of C3a and C5a receptors limited the activation of mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) in response to BCR-CD40 signaling, causing premature GC collapse and impaired affinity maturation. These results reveal that coordinated shifts in complement regulation within the GC provide crucial signals underlying GC B cell positive selection.
Keyphrases
- gas chromatography
- poor prognosis
- binding protein
- cell proliferation
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- nk cells
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- dna binding
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- staphylococcus aureus
- mass spectrometry
- capillary electrophoresis
- escherichia coli
- dna methylation
- tyrosine kinase
- computed tomography
- long non coding rna
- candida albicans