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Publication : Autoantigen, innate immunity, and T cells cooperate to break B cell tolerance during bacterial infection.

First Author  Soulas P Year  2005
Journal  J Clin Invest Volume  115
Issue  8 Pages  2257-67
PubMed ID  16041408 Mgi Jnum  J:100229
Mgi Id  MGI:3587503 Doi  10.1172/JCI24646
Citation  Soulas P, et al. (2005) Autoantigen, innate immunity, and T cells cooperate to break B cell tolerance during bacterial infection. J Clin Invest 115(8):2257-2267
abstractText  Autoantibody production during infections is considered to result from nonspecific activation of low-affinity autoreactive B cells. Whether this can lead to autoimmune disease remains uncertain. We show that chronic infection by Borrelia burgdorferi of Tg animals expressing human rheumatoid factor (RF) B cells (of low or intermediate affinities) in the absence or in the constitutive presence of the autoantigen (represented here by chimeric IgG with human constant region) breaks their state of immunological ignorance, leading to the production of RFs. Surprisingly, this production was more pronounced in intermediate-affinity RF Tg mice coexpressing the autoantigen. This overproduction was mediated by immune complexes and involved synergistic signaling between the B cell receptor and Toll-like receptors and T cell help. These findings indicate that chronic infection can activate autoreactive B cells with significant affinity and creates conditions that can drive them to differentiate into memory cells. Such cells may have some physiological yet undetermined role, but in autoimmune-prone individuals, this scenario may initiate autoimmunity.
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