Oxidative phosphorylation regulates B cell effector cytokines and promotes inflammation in multiple sclerosis.

Rui Li,Yanting Lei,Ayman Rezk,Diego A Espinoza,Jing Wang, Huiru Feng,Bo Zhang, Isabella P Barcelos, Hang Zhang,Jing Yu, Xinrui Huo,Fangyi Zhu, Changxin Yang, Hao Tang,Amy C Goldstein,Brenda L Banwell,Hakon Hakonarson,Hongwei Xu, Michael Mingueneau,Bo Sun,Hulun Li,Amit Bar-Or

Science immunology(2024)

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摘要
Dysregulated B cell cytokine production contributes to pathogenesis of immune-mediated diseases including multiple sclerosis (MS); however, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. In this study we investigated how cytokine secretion by pro-inflammatory (GM-CSF-expressing) and anti-inflammatory (IL-10-expressing) B cells is regulated. Pro-inflammatory human B cells required increased oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) compared with anti-inflammatory B cells. OXPHOS reciprocally modulated pro- and anti-inflammatory B cell cytokines through regulation of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) signaling. Partial inhibition of OXPHOS or ATP-signaling including with BTK inhibition resulted in an anti-inflammatory B cell cytokine shift, reversed the B cell cytokine imbalance in patients with MS, and ameliorated neuroinflammation in a myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)-induced experimental autoimmune encephalitis mouse model. Our study identifies how pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines are metabolically regulated in B cells and identifies ATP and its metabolites as a "fourth signal" that shapes B cell responses and is a potential target for restoring the B cell cytokine balance in autoimmune diseases.
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