Increased BCR responsiveness in B cells from patients with chronic GVHD

JL Allen, PV Tata, MS Fore, J Wooten… - Blood, The Journal …, 2014 - ashpublications.org
JL Allen, PV Tata, MS Fore, J Wooten, S Rudra, AM Deal, A Sharf, T Hoffert, PA Roehrs…
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2014ashpublications.org
Although B cells have emerged as important contributors to chronic graft-versus-host-
disease (cGVHD) pathogenesis, the mechanisms responsible for their sustained activation
remain unknown. We previously showed that patients with cGVHD have significantly
increased B cell–activating factor (BAFF) levels and that their B cells are activated and
resistant to apoptosis. Exogenous BAFF confers a state of immediate responsiveness to
antigen stimulation in normal murine B cells. To address this in cGVHD, we studied B-cell …
Abstract
Although B cells have emerged as important contributors to chronic graft-versus-host-disease (cGVHD) pathogenesis, the mechanisms responsible for their sustained activation remain unknown. We previously showed that patients with cGVHD have significantly increased B cell–activating factor (BAFF) levels and that their B cells are activated and resistant to apoptosis. Exogenous BAFF confers a state of immediate responsiveness to antigen stimulation in normal murine B cells. To address this in cGVHD, we studied B-cell receptor (BCR) responsiveness in 48 patients who were >1 year out from allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). We found that B cells from cGVHD patients had significantly increased proliferative responses to BCR stimulation along with elevated basal levels of the proximal BCR signaling components B cell linker protein (BLNK) and Syk. After initiation of BCR signaling, cGVHD B cells exhibited increased BLNK and Syk phosphorylation compared with B cells from patients without cGVHD. Blocking Syk kinase activity prevented relative post-HSCT BCR hyper-responsiveness of cGVHD B cells. These data suggest that a lowered BCR signaling threshold in cGVHD associates with increased B-cell proliferation and activation in response to antigen. We reveal a mechanism underpinning aberrant B-cell activation in cGVHD and suggest that therapeutic inhibition of the involved kinases may benefit these patients.
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