PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Schistosomes induce regulatory features in human and mouse CD1d(hi) B cells: inhibition of allergic inflammation by IL-10 and regulatory T cells.

  • Luciën E P M van der Vlugt,
  • Lucja A Labuda,
  • Arifa Ozir-Fazalalikhan,
  • Ellen Lievers,
  • Anouk K Gloudemans,
  • Kit-Yeng Liu,
  • Tom A Barr,
  • Tim Sparwasser,
  • Louis Boon,
  • Ulysse Ateba Ngoa,
  • Eliane Ngoune Feugap,
  • Ayola A Adegnika,
  • Peter G Kremsner,
  • David Gray,
  • Maria Yazdanbakhsh,
  • Hermelijn H Smits

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030883
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. e30883

Abstract

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Chronic helminth infections, such as schistosomes, are negatively associated with allergic disorders. Here, using B cell IL-10-deficient mice, Schistosoma mansoni-mediated protection against experimental ovalbumin-induced allergic airway inflammation (AAI) was shown to be specifically dependent on IL-10-producing B cells. To study the organs involved, we transferred B cells from lungs, mesenteric lymph nodes or spleen of OVA-infected mice to recipient OVA-sensitized mice, and showed that both lung and splenic B cells reduced AAI, but only splenic B cells in an IL-10-dependent manner. Although splenic B cell protection was accompanied by elevated levels of pulmonary FoxP3(+) regulatory T cells, in vivo ablation of FoxP3(+) T cells only moderately restored AAI, indicating an important role for the direct suppressory effect of regulatory B cells. Splenic marginal zone CD1d(+) B cells proved to be the responsible splenic B cell subset as they produced high levels of IL-10 and induced FoxP3(+) T cells in vitro. Indeed, transfer of CD1d(+) MZ-depleted splenic B cells from infected mice restored AAI. Markedly, we found a similarly elevated population of CD1d(hi) B cells in peripheral blood of Schistosoma haematobium-infected Gabonese children compared to uninfected children and these cells produced elevated levels of IL-10. Importantly, the number of IL-10-producing CD1d(hi) B cells was reduced after anti-schistosome treatment. This study points out that in both mice and men schistosomes have the capacity to drive the development of IL-10-producing regulatory CD1d(hi) B cells and furthermore, these are instrumental in reducing experimental allergic inflammation in mice.