Abstract

The generation, differentiation, survival and activation of B cells are coordinated by signals emerging from the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) or its precursor, the pre-BCR. The adaptor protein SLP65 (also known as BLNK) is an important signaling factor that controls pre-B cell differentiation by down-regulation of PI3K signaling. Here, we investigated the mechanism by which SLP65 interferes with PI3K signaling. We found that SLP65 induces the activity of the small GTPase RHOA, which activates PTEN, a negative regulator of PI3K signaling, by enabling its translocation to the plasma membrane. The essential role of RHOA is confirmed by the complete block in early B cell development in conditional RhoA-deficient mice. The RhoA-deficient progenitor B cells showed defects in activation of immunoglobulin gene rearrangement and fail to survive both in vitro and in vivo. Reconstituting the RhoA-deficient cells with RhoA or Foxo1, a transcription factor repressed by PI3K signaling and activated by PTEN, completely restores the survival defect. However, the defect in differentiation can only be restored by RhoA suggesting a unique role for RHOA in B cell generation and selection. In full agreement, conditional RhoA-deficient mice develop increased amounts of autoreactive antibodies with age. RHOA function is also required at later stage, as inactivation of RhoA in peripheral B cells or in a transformed mature B cell line resulted in cell loss. Together, these data show that RHOA is the key signaling factor for B cell development and function by providing a crucial SLP65-activated link between BCR signaling and activation of PTEN. Moreover, the identified essential role of RHOA for the survival of transformed B cells offers the opportunity for targeting B cell malignancies by blocking RHOA function.

Highlights

  • B lymphocyte development is a tightly synchronized process that is characterized by the sequential rearrangement of immunoglobulin gene loci, which leads to the expression of B cell antigen receptor (BCR)

  • Since small GTPases were previously shown to play an essential role in B cell development [28], we hypothesized that Guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs)-H1 could be important in SLP65-mediated signaling

  • DG75EB/HA-RhoA (DG) cells express considerably higher level of GEF-H1 and SLP65 compared to bone marrow (BM) derived pre-B cells while the expression is similar to mature (CD43-) splenic (SP) B cells (Figures S1A, B)

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Summary

Introduction

B lymphocyte development is a tightly synchronized process that is characterized by the sequential rearrangement of immunoglobulin gene loci, which leads to the expression of BCR. FOXO1 activity is dependent on Phosphatase and Tensin homolog (PTEN), a lipid phosphatase that antagonizes PI3K signaling [16–19]. Another key component that is activated downstream of preBCR/BCR signaling is Src homology containing leucocyte protein of 65 kDa (SLP65) [20]. SLP65 is a B cell-specific adaptor protein that down-regulates PI3K activity, thereby stabilizing FOXO transcription factors and inducing differentiation of pre-B cells [13]. It is elusive how SLP65 interferes with the PI3K-AKT signaling pathway to activate FOXO proteins. We already showed the importance of Nterminal leucine zipper of SLP-65 for its recruitment and activation mechanism [20, 21], but an interaction partner that helps SLP-65 to translocate into the vicinity of pre-BCR at cell membrane was missing

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