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Belimumab promotes negative selection of activated autoreactive B cells in systemic lupus erythematosus patients
Weiqing Huang, Tam D. Quach, Cosmin Dascalu, Zheng Liu, Tungming Leung, Miranda Byrne-Steele, Wenjing Pan, Qunying Yang, Jian Han, Martin Lesser, Thomas L. Rothstein, Richard Furie, Meggan Mackay, Cynthia Aranow, Anne Davidson
Weiqing Huang, Tam D. Quach, Cosmin Dascalu, Zheng Liu, Tungming Leung, Miranda Byrne-Steele, Wenjing Pan, Qunying Yang, Jian Han, Martin Lesser, Thomas L. Rothstein, Richard Furie, Meggan Mackay, Cynthia Aranow, Anne Davidson
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Research Article Immunology

Belimumab promotes negative selection of activated autoreactive B cells in systemic lupus erythematosus patients

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Abstract

Belimumab has therapeutic benefit in active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), especially in patients with high-titer anti-dsDNA antibodies. We asked whether the profound B cell loss in belimumab-treated SLE patients is accompanied by shifts in the immunoglobulin repertoire. We enrolled 15 patients who had been continuously treated with belimumab for more than 7 years, 17 matched controls, and 5 patients who were studied before and after drug initiation. VH genes of sort-purified mature B cells and plasmablasts were subjected to next-generation sequencing. We found that B cell–activating factor (BAFF) regulates the transitional B cell checkpoint, with conservation of transitional 1 (T1) cells and approximately 90% loss of T3 and naive B cells after chronic belimumab treatment. Class-switched memory B cells, B1 B cells, and plasmablasts were also substantially depleted. Next-generation sequencing revealed no redistribution of VH, DH, or JH family usage and no effect of belimumab on representation of the autoreactive VH4-34 gene or CDR3 composition in unmutated IgM sequences, suggesting a minimal effect on selection of the naive B cell repertoire. Interestingly, a significantly greater loss of VH4-34 was observed among mutated IgM and plasmablast sequences in chronic belimumab–treated subjects than in controls, suggesting that belimumab promotes negative selection of activated autoreactive B cells.

Authors

Weiqing Huang, Tam D. Quach, Cosmin Dascalu, Zheng Liu, Tungming Leung, Miranda Byrne-Steele, Wenjing Pan, Qunying Yang, Jian Han, Martin Lesser, Thomas L. Rothstein, Richard Furie, Meggan Mackay, Cynthia Aranow, Anne Davidson

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Figure 5

VH4-34 and CDR3 usage across groups.

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VH4-34 and CDR3 usage across groups.
Frequency of VH4-34 in each subset ...
Frequency of VH4-34 in each subset for (A) lupus control (LC) (n = 6–8) and (B) chronic belimumab (CB) (n = 13) patients are shown in connected dot plots, with each line representing 1 patient. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; ns, not significant. Comparisons were performed using Wilcoxon’s rank-sum test. (C) Plot displays the percentage reduction of VH4-34 usage in mutated mature B cells compared with unmutated mature B cells. Comparisons were performed using Mann-Whitney analysis. (D) Clustered heatmap shows the amino acid usage of the CDR3 from unmutated, mutated, and plasmablast (PB) sequences of LC and CB compared with reference non-autoreactive and autoreactive sequences. (E and F) Principle component analysis (PCA) of CDR3 amino acid composition (E) and physicochemical properties (Kidera factors, F) are shown for unmutated, mutated, and PB sequences.

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