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Common patterns of B cell perturbation and expanded V4-34 immunoglobulin gene usage in autoimmunity and infection

Common patterns of B cell perturbation and expanded V4-34 immunoglobulin gene usage in autoimmunity and infection
Common patterns of B cell perturbation and expanded V4-34 immunoglobulin gene usage in autoimmunity and infection
Features of the lymphocyte population in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) include a disordered B cell profile and production of autoantibodies. An additional distinctive perturbation is the over-expression of V4-34-encoded serum immunoglobulins (Ig). A similar rise in V4-34-encoded Ig occurs in normal subjects following infection with certain herpes viruses, and is found in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated infectious mononucleosis (IM). To assess common and distinctive features of B cells in patients with SLE and IM, we compared the B cell profile and V4-34 gene involvement in patients with SLE and IM. B cell profiles from patients with IM paralleled those of patients with SLE, showing a differential loss of naïve and memory B cells and the maintenance of plasmablast/early plasma cells. Class-switched V4-34-encoded IgG from plasmablast/early plasma cells was evident both in patients with SLE and IM and revealed common features of oligoclonal expansions with most having undergone somatic hypermutation. It has been proposed that, in healthy individuals, expression of the V4-34 gene is specifically censored prior to isotype switch as a control on autoreactivity. If so, censoring is bypassed following EBV infection, after which equilibrium is restored. Continuing high serum levels in SLE may arise either by disordered regulation, or by subclinical reactivation of endogenous virus.
early plasma cells, B cell differentiation, systemic lupus erythematosus, herpes viruses, infectious mononucleosis, Epstein-Barr virus
0891-6934
9-15
Mockridge, C. Ian
327aef17-4837-4f2a-a93b-3d17cd1a7f9f
Rahman, Anisur
cb88abd6-00b3-44da-87bf-a7772844dc86
Buchan, Sarah
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Hamblin, Terry
d1c0d3d4-8ce7-41c1-a5a5-055b72ad073e
Isenberg, David A.
ede068d1-1953-4022-b894-b7aacf7d08f4
Stevenson, Freda K.
ba803747-c0ac-409f-a9c2-b61fde009f8c
Potter, Kathleen N.
86a99047-494b-405b-a3f7-650c1dcd5838
Mockridge, C. Ian
327aef17-4837-4f2a-a93b-3d17cd1a7f9f
Rahman, Anisur
cb88abd6-00b3-44da-87bf-a7772844dc86
Buchan, Sarah
9ade187d-f127-45de-ad90-9d544d64718a
Hamblin, Terry
d1c0d3d4-8ce7-41c1-a5a5-055b72ad073e
Isenberg, David A.
ede068d1-1953-4022-b894-b7aacf7d08f4
Stevenson, Freda K.
ba803747-c0ac-409f-a9c2-b61fde009f8c
Potter, Kathleen N.
86a99047-494b-405b-a3f7-650c1dcd5838

Mockridge, C. Ian, Rahman, Anisur, Buchan, Sarah, Hamblin, Terry, Isenberg, David A., Stevenson, Freda K. and Potter, Kathleen N. (2004) Common patterns of B cell perturbation and expanded V4-34 immunoglobulin gene usage in autoimmunity and infection. Autoimmunity, 37 (1), 9-15. (doi:10.1080/08916930310001624656).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Features of the lymphocyte population in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) include a disordered B cell profile and production of autoantibodies. An additional distinctive perturbation is the over-expression of V4-34-encoded serum immunoglobulins (Ig). A similar rise in V4-34-encoded Ig occurs in normal subjects following infection with certain herpes viruses, and is found in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated infectious mononucleosis (IM). To assess common and distinctive features of B cells in patients with SLE and IM, we compared the B cell profile and V4-34 gene involvement in patients with SLE and IM. B cell profiles from patients with IM paralleled those of patients with SLE, showing a differential loss of naïve and memory B cells and the maintenance of plasmablast/early plasma cells. Class-switched V4-34-encoded IgG from plasmablast/early plasma cells was evident both in patients with SLE and IM and revealed common features of oligoclonal expansions with most having undergone somatic hypermutation. It has been proposed that, in healthy individuals, expression of the V4-34 gene is specifically censored prior to isotype switch as a control on autoreactivity. If so, censoring is bypassed following EBV infection, after which equilibrium is restored. Continuing high serum levels in SLE may arise either by disordered regulation, or by subclinical reactivation of endogenous virus.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: early plasma cells, B cell differentiation, systemic lupus erythematosus, herpes viruses, infectious mononucleosis, Epstein-Barr virus

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 26488
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26488
ISSN: 0891-6934
PURE UUID: 313d4352-964c-4a03-9de5-c65c5f722204
ORCID for Freda K. Stevenson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0933-5021

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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: C. Ian Mockridge
Author: Anisur Rahman
Author: Sarah Buchan
Author: Terry Hamblin
Author: David A. Isenberg

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