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Characteristics and impact of infiltration of B-cells from systemic sclerosis patients in a 3D healthy skin model.

Authors :
Le Maître, Mathilde
Guerrier, Thomas
Collet, Aurore
Derhourhi, Mehdi
Meneboo, Jean-Pascal
Toussaint, Bénédicte
Bonnefond, Amélie
Villenet, Céline
Sebda, Shéhérazade
Bongiovanni, Antonino
Tardivel, Meryem
Simon, Myriam
Jendoubi, Manel
Daunou, Blanche
Largy, Alexis
Figeac, Martin
Dubucquoi, Sylvain
Launay, David
Source :
Frontiers in Immunology; 2024, p1-17, 17p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: In systemic sclerosis (SSc), B-cells are activated and present in the skin and lung of patients where they can interact with fibroblasts. The precise impact and mechanisms of the interaction of B-cells and fibroblasts at the tissular level are poorly studied. Objective: We investigated the impact and mechanisms of B-cell/fibroblast interactions in cocultures between B-cells from patients with SSc and 3-dimensional reconstituted healthy skin model including fibroblasts, keratinocytes and extracellular matrix. Methods: The quantification and description of the B-cell infiltration in 3D cocultures were performed using cells imagery strategy and cytometry. The effect of coculture on the transcriptome of B-cells and fibroblasts was studied with bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing approaches. The mechanisms of this interaction were studied by blocking key cytokines like IL-6 and TNF. Results: We showed a significant infiltration of B-cells in the 3D healthy skin model. The amount but not the depth of infiltration was higher with B-cells from SSc patients and with activated B-cells. B-cell infiltrates were mainly composed of naïve and memory cells, whose frequencies differed depending on B-cells origin and activation state: infiltrated B-cells from patients with SSc showed an activated profile and an overexpression of immunoglobulin genes compared to circulating B-cells before infiltration. Our study has shown for the first time that activated B-cells modified the transcriptomic profile of both healthy and SSc fibroblasts, toward a pro-inflammatory (TNF and IL-17 signaling) and interferon profile, with a key role of the TNF pathway. Conclusion: B-cells and 3D skin cocultures allowed the modelization of B-cells infiltration in tissues observed in SSc, uncovering an influence of the underlying disease and the activation state of B-cells. We showed a pro-inflammatory effect on skin fibroblasts and pro-activation effect on infiltrating B-cells during coculture. This reinforces the role of B-cells in SSc and provide potential targets for future therapeutic approach in this disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16643224
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179247913
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2024.1373464