Elevated levels of serum autoantibodies are a hallmark of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and are produced by plasma cells in response to a variety of antigenic triggers. In SLE, the triggers are complex and may include both T cell-dependent/-independent and TLR-dependent/-independent mechanisms of immune activation, which ultimately contributes to the significant immune dysregulation seen in patients at the level of cytokine production and cellular activation (B cells, T cells, dendritic cells, neutrophils and macrophages). Interferon regulatory factor 5 (IRF5) has been identified as an autoimmune susceptibility gene and polymorphisms in IRF5 associate with altered expression and hyper-activation in distinct SLE immune cell subsets. To gain further insight into the mechanisms that drive IRF5-mediated SLE immune activation, we characterised wild-type (WT) and Irf5-/- Balb/c mice in response to immunisation. WT and Irf5-/- Balb/c mice were immunised to activate various signalling pathways invivo followed by systemic immunophenotyping and detection of antibody production by multi-colour flow cytometry and ELISPOT. We identified two pathways, TLR9-dependent and T cell-dependent that resulted in IRF5 cell type-specific function. Immunisation with either CpG-B + Alum or NP-KLH + Alum but not with R848 + Alum, NP-LPS + Alum or NP-Ficoll+Alum resulted in decreased plasma cell generation and reduced antibody production in Irf5-/- mice. Notably, the mechanism(s) leading to this downstream phenotype was distinct. In CpG-B + Alum immunised mice, we found reduced activation of plasmacytoid dendritic cells, resulting in reduced IFNα and IL6 production in Irf5-/- mice. Conversely, mice immunised with NP-KLH + Alum had reduced numbers of T follicular helper cells and germinal centre B cells with reduced expression of Bcl6 in Irf5-/- mice. Moreover, T follicular helper cells from Irf5-/- mice were functionally defective. Even though the downstream phenotype of reduced antibody production in Irf5-/- mice was conserved between T cell-dependent and TLR9-dependent immunisation, the mechanisms leading to this phenotype were antigen- and cell type-specific.
Read full abstract