Publications by authors named "Corinna Setz"

The generation, differentiation, survival and activation of B cells are coordinated by signals emerging from the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) or its precursor, the pre-BCR. The adaptor protein SLP65 (also known as BLNK) is an important signaling factor that controls pre-B cell differentiation by down-regulation of PI3K signaling. Here, we investigated the mechanism by which SLP65 interferes with PI3K signaling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Homeostasis of metabolism by hormone production is crucial for maintaining physiological integrity, as disbalance can cause severe metabolic disorders such as diabetes mellitus. Here, we show that antibody-deficient mice and immunodeficiency patients have subphysiological blood glucose concentrations. Restoring blood glucose physiology required total IgG injections and insulin-specific IgG antibodies detected in total IgG preparations and in the serum of healthy individuals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * IgD-deficient mice respond to antigens faster, producing antibodies within 24 hours compared to the 3 days required in normal mice, indicating that IgD plays a key role in regulating the speed of B cell activation.
  • * In the context of autoimmunity, IgD-deficient mice develop insulin-specific autoantibodies more quickly and with worse symptoms of autoimmune diabetes, suggesting that IgD helps manage immune responses and is crucial for transitioning from initial to more refined antibody responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The function of IgD B-cell antigen receptors (BCR) on mature B cells is not well understood, especially since mature B cells also express IgM, which is enough for their development and activation.
  • Research shows that IgD expression is controlled by the FoxO1 transcription factor and influenced by PI3K signaling and the lipid phosphatase Pten, which is crucial for activating FoxO1.
  • Pten-deficient B cells fail to upregulate IgD, struggle with removing autoreactive BCR specificity, and show delayed responses in germinal center reactions after exposure to specific antigens, indicating that IgD is important for efficient immune responses to multivalent antigens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling plays a central role in regulating proliferation and survival of B cells. Here, we tested the hypothesis that B cell receptor (BCR)-mediated activation of PI3K induces the terminal differentiation factor Blimp-1 that interferes with proliferation and survival, thereby controlling the expansion of activated B cells. In fact, B-cell-specific inactivation of Pten, the negative regulator of PI3K signaling, leads to deregulated PI3K activity and elevated Blimp-1 expression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) persistently infects 40-90% of the human population but in the face of a normal immune system, viral spread and dissemination are efficiently controlled thus preventing clinically signs and disease. HCMV-infected hosts produce a remarkably large amount of HCMV-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells that can even reach 20-50% of total T memory cells in the elderly. How HCMV may elicit such large and long-lasting T-cell responses in the absence of detectable viremia has not been elucidated yet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) signaling is important for the survival of numerous cell types and class IA of PI3K is specifically required for the development of B cells but not for T cell development. Here, we show that class IA PI3K-mediated signals induce the expression of the transcription factor Pax5, which plays a central role in B cell commitment and differentiation by activating the expression of central B cell-specific signaling proteins such as SLP-65 and CD19. Defective class IA PI3K function leads to reduction in Pax5 expression and prevents B cell development beyond the stage expressing the precursor B cell receptor (pre-BCR).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) expression is a key feature of most B-cell lymphomas, but the mechanisms of BCR signal induction and the involvement of autoantigen recognition remain unclear. In follicular lymphoma (FL) B cells, BCR expression is retained despite a chromosomal translocation that links the antiapoptotic gene BCL2 to the regulatory elements of immunoglobulin genes, thereby disrupting 1 heavy-chain allele. A remarkable feature of FL-BCRs is the acquisition of potential N-glycosylation sites during somatic hypermutation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF