Cell Reports (Aug 2020)

Stromal Cell-Contact Dependent PI3K and APRIL Induced NF-κB Signaling Prevent Mitochondrial- and ER Stress Induced Death of Memory Plasma Cells

  • Rebecca Cornelis,
  • Stefanie Hahne,
  • Adriano Taddeo,
  • Georg Petkau,
  • Darya Malko,
  • Pawel Durek,
  • Manja Thiem,
  • Lukas Heiberger,
  • Lena Peter,
  • Elodie Mohr,
  • Cora Klaeden,
  • Koji Tokoyoda,
  • Francesco Siracusa,
  • Bimba Franziska Hoyer,
  • Falk Hiepe,
  • Mir-Farzin Mashreghi,
  • Fritz Melchers,
  • Hyun-Dong Chang,
  • Andreas Radbruch

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 5
p. 107982

Abstract

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Summary: The persistence of long-lived memory plasma cells in the bone marrow depends on survival factors available in the bone marrow, which are provided in niches organized by stromal cells. Using an ex vivo system in which we supply the known survival signals, direct cell contact to stromal cells, and the soluble cytokine a proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL), we have elucidated the critical signaling pathways required for the survival of long-lived plasma cells. Integrin-mediated contact of bone marrow plasma cells with stromal cells activates the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling pathway, leading to critical inactivation of Forkhead-Box-Protein O1/3 (FoxO1/3) and preventing the activation of mitochondrial stress-associated effector caspases 3 and 7. Accordingly, inhibition of PI3K signaling in vivo ablates bone marrow plasma cells. APRIL signaling, by the nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) pathway, blocks activation of the endoplasmic-reticulum-stress-associated initiator caspase 12. Thus, stromal-cell-contact-induced PI3K and APRIL-induced NF-κB signaling provide the necessary and complementary signals to maintain bone marrow memory plasma cells.

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