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IL4 (interleukin 4) induces autophagy in B cells leading to exacerbated asthma

Version 2 2018-02-01, 15:47
Version 1 2018-01-03, 14:06
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posted on 2018-02-01, 15:47 authored by Fucan Xia, Changwen Deng, Yanyan Jiang, Yulan Qu, Jiewen Deng, Zhijian Cai, Yuanyuan Ding, Zhenhong Guo, Jianli Wang

Allergic asthma is a common airway inflammatory disease in which B cells play important roles through IgE production and antigen presentation. SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) analysis showed that Atg (autophagy-related) allele mutations are involved in asthma. It has been demonstrated that macroautophagy/autophagy is essential for B cell survival, plasma cell differentiation and immunological memory maintenance. However, whether B cell autophagy participates in asthma pathogenesis remains to be investigated. In this report, we found that autophagy was enhanced in pulmonary B cells from asthma-prone mice. Autophagy deficiency in B cells led to attenuated immunopathological symptoms in asthma-prone mice. Further investigation showed that IL4 (interleukin 4), a key effector Th2 cytokine in allergic asthma, was critical for autophagy induction in B cells both in vivo and in vitro, which further sustained B cell survival and enhanced antigen presentation by B cells. Moreover, IL4-induced autophagy depended on JAK signaling via an MTOR-independent, PtdIns3K-dependent pathway. Together, our data indicate that B cell autophagy aggravates experimental asthma through multiple mechanisms.

Funding

This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China [grant number 81522019], [grant number 31270966], [grant number 81471567]; the National Key Basic Research Program of China [grant number 2013CB530502]; the National Key Research and Development Program of China [grant number 2016YFA0501801]; and the Public Welfare Technology Application Research Project of Zhejiang Province [grant number 2013C33155].

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