Allergy, Asthma & Clinical Immunology (Apr 2017)

Preconception allergen sensitization can induce B10 cells in offspring: a potential main role for maternal IgG

  • Marília Garcia de Oliveira,
  • Luana de Mendonça Oliveira,
  • Aline Aparecida de Lima Lira,
  • Fábio da Ressureição Sgnotto,
  • Alberto José da Silva Duarte,
  • Maria Notomi Sato,
  • Jefferson Russo Victor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13223-017-0195-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background The mechanisms through which allergies can be inhibited after preconception immunization with allergens are not fully understood. We aimed to evaluate whether maternal immunization can induce a regulatory B (B10) cell population in offspring in concert with allergy inhibition. Methods C57BL/6 females were or were not immunized with OVA and were mated with normal WT males. Their offspring were evaluated at 3 days of age or 20 days after neonatal immunization. Human peripheral B cells from atopic and non-atopic individuals were also evaluated. Results Preconception OVA immunization induced B10 cells in offspring, and IL-10 production appeared to be critical for FcγRIIB upregulation in offspring B cells. Murine and human IL-10-producing B cells responded in vitro to IgG according to the atopic repertoire of the cells. Conclusions Our results reveal that maternal immunization induces allergen-specific B10 cells in offspring and a pivotal role for the IgG repertoire in IL-10 production by murine and human B cells.

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