Ratiu Jeremy J, Racine Jeremy J, Hasham Muneer G, Wang Qiming, Branca Jane A, Chapman Harold D, Zhu Jing, Donghia Nina, Philip Vivek, Schott William H, Wasserfall Clive, Atkinson Mark A, Mills Kevin D, Leeth Caroline M, Serreze David V
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME 04609.
Graduate Program in Genetics, Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, Tufts University, Boston, MA 02111.
J Immunol. 2017 Jun 1;198(11):4255-4267. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1700024. Epub 2017 May 1.
B lymphocytes play a key role in type 1 diabetes (T1D) development by serving as a subset of APCs preferentially supporting the expansion of autoreactive pathogenic T cells. As a result of their pathogenic importance, B lymphocyte-targeted therapies have received considerable interest as potential T1D interventions. Unfortunately, the B lymphocyte-directed T1D interventions tested to date failed to halt β cell demise. IgG autoantibodies marking humans at future risk for T1D indicate that B lymphocytes producing them have undergone the affinity-maturation processes of class switch recombination and, possibly, somatic hypermutation. This study found that CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ablation of the activation-induced cytidine deaminase gene required for class switch recombination/somatic hypermutation induction inhibits T1D development in the NOD mouse model. The activation-induced cytidine deaminase protein induces genome-wide DNA breaks that, if not repaired through RAD51-mediated homologous recombination, result in B lymphocyte death. Treatment with the RAD51 inhibitor 4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2, 2'-disulfonic acid also strongly inhibited T1D development in NOD mice. The genetic and small molecule-targeting approaches expanded CD73 B lymphocytes that exert regulatory activity suppressing diabetogenic T cell responses. Hence, an initial CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genetic modification approach has identified the AID/RAD51 axis as a target for a potentially clinically translatable pharmacological approach that can block T1D development by converting B lymphocytes to a disease-inhibitory CD73 regulatory state.
B淋巴细胞作为抗原呈递细胞(APC)的一个亚群,在1型糖尿病(T1D)的发展中起着关键作用,它优先支持自身反应性致病T细胞的扩增。由于其致病重要性,靶向B淋巴细胞的疗法作为潜在的T1D干预措施受到了广泛关注。不幸的是,迄今为止测试的针对B淋巴细胞的T1D干预措施未能阻止β细胞死亡。标记未来有T1D风险的人类的IgG自身抗体表明,产生这些抗体的B淋巴细胞经历了类别转换重组以及可能的体细胞超突变的亲和力成熟过程。本研究发现,CRISPR/Cas9介导的对类别转换重组/体细胞超突变诱导所需的激活诱导胞苷脱氨酶基因的切除,可抑制NOD小鼠模型中T1D的发展。激活诱导胞苷脱氨酶蛋白会诱导全基因组DNA断裂,如果这些断裂不能通过RAD51介导的同源重组修复,就会导致B淋巴细胞死亡。用RAD51抑制剂4,4'-二异硫氰酸根合芪-2,2'-二磺酸处理也能强烈抑制NOD小鼠中T1D的发展。基因和小分子靶向方法可扩增具有调节活性的CD73+B淋巴细胞,从而抑制致糖尿病T细胞反应。因此,一种初始的CRISPR/Cas9介导的基因改造方法已确定AID/RAD51轴为潜在临床可转化药理学方法的靶点,该方法可通过将B淋巴细胞转化为疾病抑制性CD73调节状态来阻断T1D的发展。