PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Active chronic sarcoidosis is characterized by increased transitional blood B cells, increased IL-10-producing regulatory B cells and high BAFF levels.

  • Anne Saussine,
  • Abdellatif Tazi,
  • Séverine Feuillet,
  • Michel Rybojad,
  • Caroline Juillard,
  • Anne Bergeron,
  • Valérie Dessirier,
  • Fatiha Bouhidel,
  • Anne Janin,
  • Armand Bensussan,
  • Martine Bagot,
  • Jean-David Bouaziz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043588
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 8
p. e43588

Abstract

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BackgroundSarcoidosis is a multisystemic disease of unknown etiology characterized by a disproportionate Th1 granulomatous immune response in the organs involved. Plasmatic hypergammaglobulinemia and B cell accumulation in granulomatous lesions suggest the possible role of humoral immune responses in the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis. The purpose of this study is to describe B cell peripheral compartment in sarcoidosis.Methodology/principal findingsWe analyzed blood B cell subsets and BAFF levels in 33 patients with chronic sarcoidosis (active sarcoidosis n = 18; inactive sarcoidosis n = 15) and 18 healthy donors. Active chronic sarcoidosis patients had significantly less circulating memory B cells (pConclusions/significanceThese data show that there is an altered B cell homeostasis in active sarcoidosis and suggest BAFF antagonist drugs as potential new treatments of this disease.