Cell Reports (Nov 2015)

Transcriptomics Identify CD9 as a Marker of Murine IL-10-Competent Regulatory B Cells

  • Jianbo Sun,
  • Jiguang Wang,
  • Evangelos Pefanis,
  • Jaime Chao,
  • Gerson Rothschild,
  • Isao Tachibana,
  • Jun Kui Chen,
  • Ivaylo I. Ivanov,
  • Raul Rabadan,
  • Yoshito Takeda,
  • Uttiya Basu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.09.070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 1110 – 1117

Abstract

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Regulatory B cells (Breg) have immune suppressive functions in various autoimmune/inflammation models and diseases and are found to be enriched in diverse B cell subsets. The lack of a unique marker or set of markers efficiently identifying Breg cells impedes detailed investigation into their origin, development, and immunological roles. Here, we perform transcriptome analysis of IL-10-expressing B cells to identify key regulators for Breg biogenesis and function and identify CD9, a tetraspanin-family transmembrane protein, as a key surface marker for most mouse IL-10+ B cells and their progenitors. CD9 plays a role in the suppressive function of IL-10+ B cells in ex vivo T cell proliferation assays through a mechanism that is dependent upon B/T cell interactions. CD9+ B cells also demonstrate inhibition of Th1-mediated contact hypersensitivity in an in vivo model system. Taken together, our findings implicate CD9 in the immunosuppressive activity of regulatory B cells.