Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2018)

TLR9 Signaling Suppresses the Canonical Plasma Cell Differentiation Program in Follicular B Cells

  • Bárbara José Antunes Baptista,
  • Alessandra Granato,
  • Fábio B. Canto,
  • Fabricio Montalvão,
  • Lucas Tostes,
  • Herbert L. de Matos Guedes,
  • Antonio Coutinho,
  • Maria Bellio,
  • Andre M. Vale,
  • Alberto Nobrega

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.02281
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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The relative potency and quality of mouse B cell response to Toll-like receptors (TLRs) signaling varies significantly depending on the B cell subset and on the TLR member being engaged. Although it has been shown that marginal zone cells respond faster than follicular (FO) splenic B cells to TLR4 stimulus, FO B cells retain full capacity to proliferate and generate plasmablasts and plasma cells (PBs/PCs) with 2–3 days delayed kinetics. It is not clear whether this scenario could be extended to other members of the TLR family. Here, using quantitative cell culture conditions optimized for B cell growth and differentiation, we show that TLR9 signaling by CpG, while promoting vigorous proliferation, completely fails to induce differentiation of FO B cells into PBs/PCs. Little or absent Ig secretion following TLR9 stimulus was accompanied by lack of expression of cell surface markers and canonical transcription factors involved in PB/PC differentiation. Moreover, not only TLR9 did not induce plasmocyte differentiation, but it also strongly inhibited the massive PB/PC differentiation of FO B cells triggered by LPS/TLR4. Our study reveals unexpected opposite roles for TLR4 and TLR9 in the control of plasma cell differentiation program and disagrees with previous conclusions obtained in high-density cultures conditions on the generation of plasmocytes by TRL9 signaling. The potential implications of these findings on the role of TLR9 in controlling self-tolerance, clonal sizes and regulation of humoral responses are discussed.

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