The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Oct 2022)

Impaired TIGIT expression on B cells drives circulating follicular helper T cell expansion in multiple sclerosis

  • Hiromitsu Asashima,
  • Pierre-Paul Axisa,
  • Thi Hong Giang Pham,
  • Erin E. Longbrake,
  • William E. Ruff,
  • Nikhil Lele,
  • Inessa Cohen,
  • Khadir Raddassi,
  • Tomokazu S. Sumida,
  • David A. Hafler

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 132, no. 20

Abstract

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B cell depletion in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) markedly prevents new MRI-detected lesions and disease activity, suggesting the hypothesis that altered B cell function leads to the activation of T cells driving disease pathogenesis. Here, we performed comprehensive analyses of CD40 ligand– (CD40L-) and IL-21–stimulated memory B cells from patients with MS and healthy age-matched controls, modeling the help of follicular helper T cells (Tfh cells), and found a differential gene expression signature in multiple B cell pathways. Most striking was the impaired TIGIT expression on MS-derived B cells mediated by dysregulation of the transcription factor TCF4. Activated circulating Tfh cells (cTfh cells) expressed CD155, the ligand of TIGIT, and TIGIT on B cells revealed their capacity to suppress the proliferation of IL-17–producing cTfh cells via the TIGIT/CD155 axis. Finally, CCR6+ cTfh cells were significantly increased in patients with MS, and their frequency was inversely correlated with that of TIGIT+ B cells. Together, these data suggest that the dysregulation of negative feedback loops between TIGIT+ memory B cells and cTfh cells in MS drives the activated immune system in this disease.

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