AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the effects of B cell depletion on autoimmune disease progression in NZB/W F(1) mice, a model for lupus, comparing treatments with CD20 and CD22 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs).
  • Low-dose CD20 mAb treatments improved survival rates and delayed disease symptoms in older mice but hastened disease onset in younger mice due to the depletion of regulatory B10 cells.
  • The findings highlight that different B cell populations can have both protective and harmful roles in lupus development, emphasizing the complexity of B lymphocyte contributions during autoimmune disease.

Article Abstract

Delineating the relative contributions of B lymphocytes during the course of autoimmune disease has been difficult. Therefore, the effects of depleting all mature B cells using a potent CD20 mAb, or of depleting circulating and marginal zone B cells using a ligand-blocking CD22 mAb, were compared in NZB/W F(1) mice, a model for human systemic lupus erythematosus. Single low-dose mAb treatments depleted B cells efficiently in both NZB/W F(1) and C57BL/6 mice. Prophylactic B cell depletion by repeated CD20 mAb treatments prolonged survival during pristane-accelerated lupus in NZB/W F(1) mice, whereas CD22 mAb had little effect. Despite effective B cell depletion, neither mAb treatment prevented autoantibody generation. In addition, CD20, CD22, and control mAb-treated NZB/W F(1) mice developed anti-mouse IgG autoantibodies in contrast to parental NZB and NZW strains, which may have reduced the effectiveness of B cell depletion. Despite this, low-dose CD20 mAb treatment initiated in 12-28-wk-old mice, and administered every 4 wk thereafter, significantly delayed spontaneous disease in NZB/W F(1) mice. By contrast, B cell depletion initiated in 4-wk-old mice hastened disease onset, which paralleled depletion of the IL-10-producing regulatory B cell subset called B10 cells. B10 cells were phenotypically similar in NZB/W F(1) and C57BL/6 mice, but were expanded significantly in young NZB/W F(1) mice. Thus, B cell depletion had significant effects on NZB/W F(1) mouse survival that were dependent on the timing of treatment initiation. Therefore, distinct B cell populations can have opposing protective and pathogenic roles during lupus progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3734557PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0902391DOI Listing

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