Back to Search Start Over

Inflammatory monocytes hinder antiviral B cell responses

Authors :
Kevin Larimore
Benedict Fallet
Laura Sironi
Juan Carlos de la Torre
Philip D. Greenberg
Jessica Fioravanti
Pietro Di Lucia
Marta Mainetti
Stefano Sammicheli
Marco De Giovanni
Claudia Cristofani
Mirela Kuka
Renato Ostuni
Carmela G. Maganuco
Lucia Ganzer
Luca G. Guidotti
Nereida Jiménez de Oya
Matteo Iannacone
Sammicheli, S
Kuka, M
Di Lucia, P
de Oya, N
De Giovanni, M
Fioravanti, J
Cristofani, C
Maganuco, C
Fallet, B
Ganzer, L
Sironi, L
Mainetti, M
Ostuni, R
Larimore, K
Greenberg, P
de la Torre, J
Guidotti, L
Iannacone, M
Sammicheli, Stefano
Kuka, Mirela
Di Lucia, Pietro
de Oya, Nereida Jimenez
De Giovanni, Marco
Fioravanti, Jessica
Cristofani, Claudia
Maganuco, Carmela G
Fallet, Benedict
Ganzer, Lucia
Sironi, Laura
Mainetti, Marta
Ostuni, Renato
Larimore, Kevin
Greenberg, Philip D
de la Torre, Juan Carlo
Guidotti, Luca G
Iannacone, Matteo
Source :
Science Immunology. 1
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2016.

Abstract

Antibodies are critical for protection against viral infections. However, several viruses, such as lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), avoid the induction of early protective antibody responses by poorly understood mechanisms. We analyzed the spatiotemporal dynamics of B cell activation to show that, upon subcutaneous infection, LCMV-specific B cells readily relocate to the interfollicular and T cell areas of draining lymph nodes, where they extensively interact with CD11b+Ly6Chi inflammatory monocytes. These myeloid cells were recruited to lymph nodes draining LCMV infection sites in a type I interferon– and CCR2-dependent fashion, and they suppressed antiviral B cell responses by virtue of their ability to produce nitric oxide. Depletion of inflammatory monocytes, inhibition of their lymph node recruitment, or impairment of their nitric oxide–producing ability enhanced LCMV-specific B cell survival and led to robust neutralizing antibody production. Our results identify inflammatory monocytes as critical gatekeepers that restrain antiviral B cell responses and suggest that certain viruses take advantage of these cells to prolong their persistence within the host.

Details

ISSN :
24709468
Volume :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....af2aa277a2d4bfc0e6badc0f3d900d10
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.aah6789