B Cells Producing Type I IFN Modulate Macrophage Polarization in Tuberculosis

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Bénard, Alan | Sakwa, Imme | Schierloh, Pablo | Colom, André | Mercier, Ingrid | Tailleux, Ludovic | Jouneau, Luc | Boudinot, Pierre | Al-Saati, Talal | Lang, Roland | Rehwinkel, Jan | Loxton, Andre | Kaufmann, Stefan | Le Berre, Véronique | O’garra, Anne | Sasiain, Maria del Carmen | Gicquel, Brigitte | Fillatreau, Simon | Neyrolles, Olivier | Hudrisier, Denis

Edité par CCSD ; American Thoracic Society -

International audience. RATIONALE:In addition to their well-known function as antibody-producing cells, B lymphocytes can markedly influence the course of infectious or noninfectious diseases via antibody-independent mechanisms. In tuberculosis (TB), B cells accumulate in lungs, yet their functional contribution to the host response remains poorly understood.OBJECTIVES:To document the role of B cells in TB in an unbiased manner.METHODS:We generated the transcriptome of B cells isolated from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb)-infected mice and validated the identified key pathways using in vitro and in vivo assays. The obtained data were substantiated using B cells from pleural effusion of patients with TB.MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:B cells isolated from Mtb-infected mice displayed a STAT1 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 1)-centered signature, suggesting a role for IFNs in B-cell response to infection. B cells stimulated in vitro with Mtb produced type I IFN, via a mechanism involving the innate sensor STING (stimulator of interferon genes), and antagonized by MyD88 (myeloid differentiation primary response 88) signaling. In vivo, B cells expressed type I IFN in the lungs of Mtb-infected mice and, of clinical relevance, in pleural fluid from patients with TB. Type I IFN expression by B cells induced an altered polarization of macrophages toward a regulatory/antiinflammatory profile in vitro. In vivo, increased provision of type I IFN by B cells in a murine model of B cell-restricted Myd88 deficiency correlated with an enhanced accumulation of regulatory/antiinflammatory macrophages in Mtb-infected lungs.CONCLUSIONS:Type I IFN produced by Mtb-stimulated B cells favors macrophage polarization toward a regulatory/antiinflammatory phenotype during Mtb infection.

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