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TRAF3 Acts as a Checkpoint of B Cell Receptor Signaling to Control Antibody Class Switch Recombination and Anergy

Authors :
Ping Xie
Samantha M. Y. Chen
Jing Wang
Rachel A. Woolaver
Vince Popolizio
Xiaoguang Wang
Alexandra L Krinsky
Zhangguo Chen
Source :
J Immunol
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The American Association of Immunologists, 2020.

Abstract

The BCR recognizes foreign Ags to initiate humoral immunity that needs isotype-switched Abs generated via class switch recombination (CSR); however, stimulating the BCR in the absence of costimulation (e.g., CD40) does not induce CSR; thus, it remains elusive whether and how the BCR induces CSR mechanistically. Autoreactive B cells can maintain anergy via unresponsiveness of their BCRs to self-antigens. However, it remains unknown what molecule(s) restrict BCR signaling strength for licensing BCR-induced CSR and whether deficiency of such molecule(s) disrupts autoreactive B cell anergy and causes B cell–mediated diseases by modulating BCR signaling. In this study, we employ mouse models to show that the BCR’s capacity to induce CSR is restrained by B cell–intrinsic checkpoints TRAF3 and TRAF2, whose deletion in B cells enables the BCR to induce CSR in the absence of costimulation. TRAF3 deficiency permits BCR-induced CSR by elevating BCR-proximal signaling intensity. Furthermore, NF-κB2 is required for BCR-induced CSR in TRAF3-deficient B cells but not for CD40-induced or LPS-induced CSR, suggesting that TRAF3 restricts NF-κB2 activation to specifically limit the BCR’s ability to induce CSR. TRAF3 deficiency also disrupts autoreactive B cell anergy by elevating calcium influx in response to BCR stimulation, leading to lymphoid organ disorders and autoimmune manifestations. We showed that TRAF3 deficiency-associated autoimmune phenotypes can be rectified by limiting BCR repertoires or attenuating BCR signaling strength. Thus, our studies highlight the importance of TRAF3-mediated restraint on BCR signaling strength for controlling CSR, B cell homeostasis, and B cell–mediated disorders.

Details

ISSN :
15506606 and 00221767
Volume :
205
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86ea901eb4664ac5e182ee9a9c11bca6