Immunity
Volume 26, Issue 6, 22 June 2007, Pages 812-826
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Article
Intestinal Bacteria Trigger T Cell-Independent Immunoglobulin A2 Class Switching by Inducing Epithelial-Cell Secretion of the Cytokine APRIL

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Summary

Bacteria colonize the intestine shortly after birth and thereafter exert several beneficial functions, including induction of protective immunoglobulin A (IgA) antibodies. The distal intestine contains IgA2, which is more resistant to bacterial proteases than is IgA1. The mechanism by which B cells switch from IgM to IgA2 remains unknown. We found that human intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) triggered IgA2 class switching in B cells, including IgA1-expressing B cells arriving from mucosal follicles, through a CD4+ T cell-independent pathway involving a proliferation-inducing ligand (APRIL). IECs released APRIL after sensing bacteria through Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and further increased APRIL production by activating dendritic cells via thymic stromal lymphopoietin. Our data indicate that bacteria elicit IgA2 class switching by linking lamina propria B cells with IECs through a TLR-inducible signaling program requiring APRIL. Thus, mucosal vaccines should activate IECs to induce more effective IgA2 responses.

CELLIMMUNO
MOLIMMUNO

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