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ERK signaling is a molecular switch integrating opposing inputs from B cell receptor and T cell cytokines to control TLR4-driven plasma cell differentiation

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Rui, Lixin
Healy, James
Blasioli, Julie
Goodnow, Christopher

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American Association of Immunologists

Abstract

Differentiation of B cells into plasma cells represents a critical immunoregulatory checkpoint where neutralizing Abs against infectious agents mast be selected whereas self-reactive Abs are suppressed. Bacterial LPS is a uniquely potent bacterial immunogen that can bypass self-tolerance within the T cell repertoire. We show here that during LPS-induced plasma cell differentiation, the ERK intracellular signaling pathway serves as a pivotal switch integrating opposing inputs from Ag via BCR and from the two best characterized B cell differentiation factors made by T cells, IL-2 and IL-5. Continuous Ag receptor signaling through the RAS/MEK/ERK pathway, as occurs in self-reactive B cells, inhibits LPS induction of Blimp-1 and the plasma cell differentiation program. Differentiation resumes after a transient pulse of Ag-ERK signaling, or upon inactivation of ERK by IL-2 and IL-5 through induction of dual-specificity phosphatase 5 (Dusp5). The architecture of this molecular switch provides a framework for understanding the specificity of antibacterial Ab responses and resistance to bacterially induced autoimmune diseases such as Guillain-Barré syndrome.

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Journal of Immunology

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2037-12-31
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