Autoreactivity in naïve human fetal B cells is associated with commensal bacteria recognition.
Jeff W ChenTyler A RiceJason M BannockAgata A BieleckaJuliet D StraussJason R CatanzaroHaowei WangLaurence C MenardJennifer H AnolikNoah W PalmEric MeffrePublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Restricted V(D)J recombination during fetal development was postulated to limit antibody repertoire breadth and prevent autoimmunity. However, newborn serum contains abundant autoantibodies, suggesting that B cell tolerance during gestation is not yet fully established. To investigate this apparent paradox, we evaluated the reactivities of more than 450 antibodies cloned from single B cells from human fetal liver, bone marrow, and spleen. We found that incomplete B cell tolerance in early human fetal life favored the accumulation of polyreactive B cells that bound both apoptotic cells and commensal bacteria from healthy adults. Thus, the restricted fetal preimmune repertoire contains potentially beneficial self-reactive innate-like B cell specificities that may facilitate the removal of apoptotic cells during development and shape gut microbiota assembly after birth.