PLoS Pathogens (Mar 2015)

Disruption of IL-21 signaling affects T cell-B cell interactions and abrogates protective humoral immunity to malaria.

  • Damián Pérez-Mazliah,
  • Dorothy Hui Lin Ng,
  • Ana Paula Freitas do Rosário,
  • Sarah McLaughlin,
  • Béatris Mastelic-Gavillet,
  • Jan Sodenkamp,
  • Garikai Kushinga,
  • Jean Langhorne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004715
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. e1004715

Abstract

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Interleukin-21 signaling is important for germinal center B-cell responses, isotype switching and generation of memory B cells. However, a role for IL-21 in antibody-mediated protection against pathogens has not been demonstrated. Here we show that IL-21 is produced by T follicular helper cells and co-expressed with IFN-γ during an erythrocytic-stage malaria infection of Plasmodium chabaudi in mice. Mice deficient either in IL-21 or the IL-21 receptor fail to resolve the chronic phase of P. chabaudi infection and P. yoelii infection resulting in sustained high parasitemias, and are not immune to re-infection. This is associated with abrogated P. chabaudi-specific IgG responses, including memory B cells. Mixed bone marrow chimeric mice, with T cells carrying a targeted disruption of the Il21 gene, or B cells with a targeted disruption of the Il21r gene, demonstrate that IL-21 from T cells signaling through the IL-21 receptor on B cells is necessary to control chronic P. chabaudi infection. Our data uncover a mechanism by which CD4+ T cells and B cells control parasitemia during chronic erythrocytic-stage malaria through a single gene, Il21, and demonstrate the importance of this cytokine in the control of pathogens by humoral immune responses. These data are highly pertinent for designing malaria vaccines requiring long-lasting protective B-cell responses.