1. A triad of somatic mutagenesis converges in self-reactive B cells to cause a virus-induced autoimmune disease.
- Author
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Young, Clara, Singh, Mandeep, Jackson, Katherine J.L., Field, Matt A., Peters, Timothy J., Angioletti-Uberti, Stefano, Frenkel, Daan, Ravishankar, Shyamsundar, Gupta, Money, Wang, Jing J., Agapiou, David, Faulks, Megan L., Al-Eryani, Ghamdan, Luciani, Fabio, Gordon, Tom P., Reed, Joanne H., Danta, Mark, Carr, Andrew, Kelleher, Anthony D., and Dore, Gregory J.
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IMMUNOLOGIC memory , *SOMATIC mutation , *RHEUMATOID factor , *MOLECULAR mimicry , *WHOLE genome sequencing - Abstract
The unexplained association between infection and autoimmune disease is strongest for hepatitis C virus-induced cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (HCV-cryovas). To analyze its origins, we traced the evolution of pathogenic rheumatoid factor (RF) autoantibodies in four HCV-cryovas patients by deep single-cell multi-omic analysis, revealing three sources of B cell somatic mutation converged to drive the accumulation of a large disease-causing clone. A method for quantifying low-affinity binding revealed recurring antibody variable domain combinations created by V(D)J recombination that bound self-immunoglobulin G (IgG) but not viral E2 antigen. Whole-genome sequencing revealed thousands of somatic mutations, numerically comparable to chronic lymphocytic leukemia and normal memory B cells, but with 1–2 corresponding to driver mutations found recurrently in B cell leukemia and lymphoma. V(D)J hypermutation created autoantibodies with compromised solubility in complex with self-IgG. In this virus-induced autoimmune disease, infection promotes a catastrophic confluence of somatic mutagenesis in the descendants of a single B cell. [Display omitted] • Pathogenic B cell clones persist in HCV-cryovas patients despite HCV elimination • Clones have acquired thousands of mutations, including 1–2 lymphoma driver mutations • Ancestor and progeny self-reactive to multimerized IgG do not bind HCV E2 antigen • IgM hypermutation increased affinity for IgG and introduced pathogenic insolubility Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis is a common complication of HCV infection. Young et al. reveal that three categories of somatic mutagenesis converge on a single B cell to generate pathogenic, autoantibody-producing clones in this virus-induced autoimmune disease, without evidence of molecular mimicry against the HCV E2 antigen as the initiating trigger. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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