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BAFF-driven B cell hyperplasia underlies lung disease in common variable immunodeficiency
Paul J. Maglione, Gavin Gyimesi, Montserrat Cols, Lin Radigan, Huaibin M. Ko, Tamar Weinberger, Brian H. Lee, Emilie K. Grasset, Adeeb H. Rahman, Andrea Cerutti, Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles
Paul J. Maglione, Gavin Gyimesi, Montserrat Cols, Lin Radigan, Huaibin M. Ko, Tamar Weinberger, Brian H. Lee, Emilie K. Grasset, Adeeb H. Rahman, Andrea Cerutti, Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles
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Clinical Research and Public Health Immunology

BAFF-driven B cell hyperplasia underlies lung disease in common variable immunodeficiency

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Abstract

BACKGROUND. Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is the most common symptomatic primary immunodeficiency and is frequently complicated by interstitial lung disease (ILD) for which etiology is unknown and therapy inadequate. METHODS. Medical record review implicated B cell dysregulation in CVID ILD progression. This was further studied in blood and lung samples using culture, cytometry, ELISA, and histology. Eleven CVID ILD patients were treated with rituximab and followed for 18 months. RESULTS. Serum IgM increased in conjunction with ILD progression, a finding that reflected the extent of IgM production within B cell follicles in lung parenchyma. Targeting these pulmonary B cell follicles with rituximab ameliorated CVID ILD, but disease recurred in association with IgM elevation. Searching for a stimulus of this pulmonary B cell hyperplasia, we found B cell–activating factor (BAFF) increased in blood and lungs of progressive and post-rituximab CVID ILD patients and detected elevation of BAFF-producing monocytes in progressive ILD. This elevated BAFF interacts with naive B cells, as they are the predominant subset in progressive CVID ILD, expressing BAFF receptor (BAFF-R) within pulmonary B cell follicles and blood to promote Bcl-2 expression. Antiapoptotic Bcl-2 was linked with exclusion of apoptosis from B cell follicles in CVID ILD and increased survival of naive CVID B cells cultured with BAFF. CONCLUSION. CVID ILD is driven by pulmonary B cell hyperplasia that is reflected by serum IgM elevation, ameliorated by rituximab, and bolstered by elevated BAFF-mediated apoptosis resistance via BAFF-R. FUNDING. NIH, Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium, and Rare Disease Foundation.

Authors

Paul J. Maglione, Gavin Gyimesi, Montserrat Cols, Lin Radigan, Huaibin M. Ko, Tamar Weinberger, Brian H. Lee, Emilie K. Grasset, Adeeb H. Rahman, Andrea Cerutti, Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles

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Figure 1

Increase of serum IgM distinguishes CVID patients with progressive ILD.

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Increase of serum IgM distinguishes CVID patients with progressive ILD.
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(A) CT chest scans from CVID patients with stable or progressive ILD over a 12-month period (area of worsening inflammation is circled) and corresponding FVC measurements. (B) Serum IgM increased to a significantly higher level in CVID patients with progressive ILD compared with those with stable or no ILD over 24 months of followup. (C) FVC and (D) DLCO over 24 months measured in CVID ILD patients grouped on the basis of serum IgM increase ≥ or < 10 mg/dl. (E) A greater proportion of CVID ILD patients had a serum IgM increase of ≥ 10 mg/dl compared with other CVID patients in the USIDNET registry. (F) Serum IgM increased to a significantly higher level in CVID patients with ILD compared with those without in the USIDNET registry. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 by Kruskal-Wallis test for 3-group comparison and Mann-Whitney test for 2-group comparison. ns, not significant.

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