Puppa Mary-Ann, Bennstein Sabrina B, Fischer Henrike J, Rink Lothar
Institute of Immunology, Medical Faculty, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.
Institute of Immunology, Medical Faculty, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.
J Trace Elem Med Biol. 2024 Dec;86:127556. doi: 10.1016/j.jtemb.2024.127556. Epub 2024 Oct 20.
Zinc is a vital trace element, important for many different immune processes and adequate functionality. B cell development is known to be dependent on sufficient zinc supply. Recently a regulatory B cell (Breg) population has been identified, as CD19IL-10 B cells, able to regulate immune responses by secretion of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-10. Due to their promotion of an anti-inflammatory milieu, Bregs could reduce or might even prevent excessive pro-inflammatory responses. Hence, having and maintaining Bregs could be interesting for patients suffering from allergies, asthma, and autoimmune diseases. Therefore, understanding Breg generation, required signaling, and their developmental requirements are important. Since our group could previously show that zinc is important for regulatory T cells, we aimed to determine the effect of zinc deficiency on Breg development from human peripheral blood CD19 B cells. We observed highest Breg generation with a combined stimulus of CD40L and the toll like receptor (TLR) ligand, CpG-ODN2006. Using this stimulus, we observed that zinc deficient medium significantly decreased Breg generation from purified B cells. This was not seen in Bregs generated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) without B cell enrichment suggesting a compensatory mechanism. In line with literature, our data also confirms Bregs develop from CD19 B cells, since total CD19 frequencies remained unchanged, while Breg frequencies varied between stimuli and zinc media conditions. Our study shows for the first time that zinc deficiency significantly impairs Breg development, which provides an important new perspective for clinical applications and therapeutic strategies.
锌是一种至关重要的微量元素,对许多不同的免疫过程和正常功能都很重要。已知B细胞的发育依赖于充足的锌供应。最近,一种调节性B细胞(Breg)群体被鉴定出来,即CD19IL-10 B细胞,它能够通过分泌抗炎细胞因子(如IL-10)来调节免疫反应。由于它们促进了抗炎环境,Bregs可以减少甚至可能预防过度的促炎反应。因此,对于患有过敏、哮喘和自身免疫性疾病的患者来说,拥有并维持Bregs可能是有益的。因此,了解Breg的产生、所需信号及其发育需求很重要。由于我们的研究小组之前已经表明锌对调节性T细胞很重要,我们旨在确定锌缺乏对人外周血CD19 B细胞中Breg发育的影响。我们观察到,在CD40L和Toll样受体(TLR)配体CpG-ODN2006的联合刺激下,Breg的产生最多。使用这种刺激,我们观察到缺锌培养基显著降低了纯化B细胞中Breg的产生。而在未经B细胞富集的外周血单个核细胞(PBMCs)产生的Bregs中未观察到这种情况,这表明存在一种补偿机制。与文献一致,我们的数据也证实Bregs是由CD19 B细胞发育而来的,因为总CD19频率保持不变,而Breg频率在不同刺激和锌培养基条件下有所不同。我们的研究首次表明锌缺乏会显著损害Breg的发育,这为临床应用和治疗策略提供了一个重要的新视角。