Implication of lymphocytes macroautophagy in humoral immune response

2015 
Macroautophagy, called autophagy, is a catabolic lysosomal process. Macroautophagy was recently shown to regulate the immune response especially by regulating lymphocyte biology. We demonstrated that autophagy is deregulated in T cells from lupus mouse models and patients suffering from systemic lupus erythematosus. We suggest that autophagy could regulate the survival of autoreactive lymphocytes during lupus. We then wanted to better understand the role of autophagy in normal and pathologic humoral responses. We have generated mouse models conditionally deficient for ATG5 in B cells. In accordance with previous studies, we show that autophagy is dispensable for B cell survival and activation under short-term B cell receptor (BCR) activation. We then investigated long-term immunity on a spontaneous model of autoimmunity. In autoimmune-prone mice deficient for autophagy in B cells, we demonstrate that autophagy is important to maintain high levels of anti-nuclear auto-antibodies, and high number of long-lived plasma cells in the bone marrow. With these same mouse models, we show that autophagy contributes to the polarization of internalized BCR after stimulation, together with the recruitment of lysosomes and MHCMII molecules-containing compartments. The polarization of B cells is particularly important for the acquisition of particulate antigens for B cells. We postulate that ATG5 and possibly the autophagic machinery could facilitate the formation of the immune synapse. We indeed demonstrate that presentation of immobilized antigens to T cells is compromised in the absence of ATG5 in B cells. Thus, modulating autophagy in lymphocytes, could limit at several levels the activation and/or survival of autoreactive lymphocytes during autoimmunity.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []