Systemic sclerosis patients present alterations in the expression of molecules involved in B-cell regulation
Author
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Soto, Lilian
Author
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Ferrier, Ashley
Author
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Aravena Madariaga, Octavio
Author
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Fonseca, Elianet
Author
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Berendsen, Jorge
Author
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Biere, Andrea
Author
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Bueno, Daniel
Author
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Ramos, Verónica
Author
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Aguillón Gutiérrez, Juan Carlos
Author
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Catalán Martina, Diego
Admission date
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2015-12-14T14:45:22Z
Available date
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2015-12-14T14:45:22Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2015
Cita de ítem
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Front. Immunol. 6:496 sep 2015
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00496
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/135684
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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The activation threshold of B cells is tightly regulated by an array of inhibitory and activator receptors in such a way that disturbances in their expression can lead to the appearance of autoimmunity. The aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of activating and inhibitory molecules involved in the modulation of B cell functions in transitional, naive, and memory B-cell subpopulations from systemic sclerosis patients. To achieve this, blood samples were drawn from 31 systemic sclerosis patients and 53 healthy individuals. Surface expression of CD86, MHC II, CD19, CD21, CD40, CD22, Siglec 10, CD35, and Fc gamma RIIB was determined by flow cytometry. IL-10 production was evaluated by intracellular flow cytometry from isolated B cells. Soluble IL-6 and IL-10 levels were measured by ELISA from supernatants of stimulated B cells. Systemic sclerosis patients exhibit an increased frequency of transitional and naive B cells related to memory B cells compared with healthy controls. Transitional and naive B cells from patients express higher levels of CD86 and Fc gamma RIIB than healthy donors. Also, B cells from patients show high expression of CD19 and CD40, whereas memory cells from systemic sclerosis patients show reduced expression of CD35. CD19 and CD35 expression levels associate with different autoantibody profiles. IL-10(+) B cells and secreted levels of IL-10 were markedly reduced in patients. In conclusion, systemic sclerosis patients show alterations in the expression of molecules involved in B-cell regulation. These abnormalities may be determinant in the B-cell hyperactivation observed in systemic sclerosis.
en_US
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
FONDECYT-Chile
1121100
11121497
REDES
140041
Millennium Institute on Immunology and Imnunotherapy
P09-016-F