Murine B cell response to TLR7 ligands depends on an IFN-β feedback loop

NM Green, A Laws, K Kiefer, L Busconi… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
NM Green, A Laws, K Kiefer, L Busconi, YM Kim, MM Brinkmann, EH Trail, K Yasuda
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
Type I IFNs play an important, yet poorly characterized, role in systemic lupus
erythematosus. To better understand the interplay between type I IFNs and the activation of
autoreactive B cells, we evaluated the effect of type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) deficiency in
murine B cell responses to common TLR ligands. In comparison to wild-type B cells, TLR7-
stimulated IFNAR−/− B cells proliferated significantly less well and did not up-regulate
costimulatory molecules. By contrast, IFNAR1−/− B cells did not produce cytokines, but did …
Abstract
Type I IFNs play an important, yet poorly characterized, role in systemic lupus erythematosus. To better understand the interplay between type I IFNs and the activation of autoreactive B cells, we evaluated the effect of type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) deficiency in murine B cell responses to common TLR ligands. In comparison to wild-type B cells, TLR7-stimulated IFNAR−/− B cells proliferated significantly less well and did not up-regulate costimulatory molecules. By contrast, IFNAR1−/− B cells did not produce cytokines, but did proliferate and up-regulate activation markers in response to other TLR ligands. These defects were not due to a difference in the distribution of B cell populations or a failure to produce a soluble factor other than a type I IFN. Instead, the compromised response pattern reflected the disruption of an IFN-β feedback loop and constitutively low expression of TLR7 in the IFNAR1−/− B cells. These results highlight subtle differences in the IFN dependence of TLR7 responses compared with other TLR-mediated B cell responses.
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