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Increased TLR7 Signaling of BCR-Activated B Cells in Chronic Graft-Versus Host Disease (cGVHD)

Authors :
Jonathan C. Poe
Stefanie Sarantopoulos
Amy N. Suthers
Hsuan Su
Nelson J. Chao
Sarah Anand
Yiping Yang
David A. Rizzieri
Jeremy J. Rose
Steven Z. Pavletic
Frances T. Hakim
Mitchell E. Horwitz
Source :
Blood. 130:75-75
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2017.

Abstract

After hematopoietic allogeneic stem cell transplantation (HCT), B cells reconstitute in the presence of alloantigen in a nucleic acid (NA)-rich environment. Ongoing tissue and cellular damage results in release of endogenous NA that may serve as ligand for endosomal Toll-Like Receptors (TLRs). Alloantibodies and autoantibodies, including NA-binding antibodies, have been associated with the presence of cGVHD manifestations. In patients after HCT, B cells are constitutively activated via key proximal B Cell Receptor (BCR) signaling molecules, Syk and BLNK (Allen JL et al Blood 2014, Flynn R et al Blood 2015) . In mouse models of autoimmunity, TLR7 or TLR9 can operate in conjunction with the BCR to mediate autoantibody production (Suthers A et al. Front Immunol. 2017). Whether TLR7/9-BCR signaling contributes to cGVHD remains unknown. We studied responses by TLR9 and TLR7 in B cells from patients >12 months post-HCT who had active, inactive or no cGVHD at the time of sample acquisition and were not receiving high dose steroid. In contrast to a previous study (She K et al. BBMT 2007) and consistent with findings by others (de Masson A et al Blood 2015), we did not find a consistent increase in B cell response to TLR9 agonist. Instead we found significantly higher TLR7 transcript expression in B cells from patients with active cGVHD (n=7) compared to no/inactive cGVHD patient B cells (n=11, p=0.042). TLR7 over-expression in mice leads to anti-RNA antibody production by immature B cells (Giltiay NV et al JEM 2013). We employed ELISA to measure antibodies to a known RNA-containing autoantigen, Ro-52 in a group of 66 plasma samples. We found that significantly more patients with active cGVHD (n=32) had anti-Ro-52 antibody compared to inactive cGVHD patients (n=22) or patients without cGVHD (n=12) (Fisher exact test for both comparisons = p To determine if TLR7 activation was increased in cGVHD B cells, we measured IL-6 production. Without ex vivo stimulation, cGVHD patient B cells produced significantly more IL-6 (p=0.039) (Fig.1A). After TLR7 stimulation with R848, B cells from patients with active cGVHD had significantly increased IL-6 production compared those from patients without (p= 0.008) or those with inactive cGVHD (p=0.017) (Fig.1A). We next investigated the influence of the BCR-activated state in cGVHD on TLR7 responses and signaling. Using flow cytometry, we measured Ki-67 expression as a marker of activation after ex vivo stimulation with both low level surrogate BCR antigen and R848. We found that B cells from active cGVHD patients were significantly more responsive compared to no cGVHD patients (p=0.015) and healthy donors (p=0.045), revealing increased synergistic BCR-TLR7 signaling in cGVHD B cells (Fig.1B). To further investigate this, we employed qPCR to measure levels of the proximal BCR signaling molecule, Lyn, known to negatively regulate anti-NA antibody production (Lamagna et al. J. Immunol. 2014). We found that Lyn expression was significantly decreased in B cells from active cGVHD patients compared to healthy donor (p=0.001), inactive (p=0.042) or no (p=0.007) cGVHD patients (Fig.1C). Lyn can also negatively regulate TLR7/9 activation by directly associating with Interferon Regulatory Factor 5 (IRF5), which is important for pro-inflammatory cytokine production, including IL-6 (Ban et al, J.Immunol. 2016). Consistent with a role for Lyn in TLR7 activation, we found that IRF5 was significantly increased in active cGVHD patient B cells compared to all other groups (healthy donor, p=0.035; inactive cGVHD, p=0.011; no cGVHD, p=0.006) (Fig.1D). Notably, no difference in expression was found in downstream TLR7 transcription factors, IRF3 and IRF7 . Using a mouse model (Zhang C et al Blood 2006), we found significantly higher IRF5 expression in splenic B cells in animals with cGVHD manifestations (p=0.005). Ongoing mouse work will ascertain mechanistic roles for Lyn and IRF5 in TLR7 signaling by cGVHD B cells. Together data support a potentially pathogenic role of TLR7 signaling in cGVHD B cells. Development of agents that block this newly elucidated TLR7-BCR signaling axis in cGVHD is warranted. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant R01 HL129061 Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Rizzieri: Erytech: Research Funding; Shire: Research Funding.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........25fd2036b156e8dc285e4729e3ec55f1