MAVS, cGAS, and endogenous retroviruses in T-independent B cell responses

Ming Zeng(Southwestern Medical Center), Zeping Hu(Southwestern Medical Center), Xiaolei Shi(Southwestern Medical Center), Xiaohong Li(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiaohong Li(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiaoming Zhan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiao-Dong Li(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xiao-Dong Li(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jianhui Wang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jin Huk Choi(Southwestern Medical Center), Kuan-wen Wang(Southwestern Medical Center), Tiana Purrington(Southwestern Medical Center), Miao Tang(Southwestern Medical Center), Maggy Fina(Southwestern Medical Center), Ralph J. DeBerardinis(Karolinska Institutet), Eva Marie Y. Moresco(Karolinska Institutet), Gabriel Kristian Pedersen(Karolinska Institutet), Gerald M. McInerney(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Gunilla B. Karlsson Hedestam(Karolinska Institutet), Zhijian J. Chen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Bruce Beutler(Southwestern Medical Center)
Science
December 19, 2014
Cited by 105Open Access
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Abstract

Multivalent molecules with repetitive structures including bacterial capsular polysaccharides and viral capsids elicit antibody responses through B cell receptor (BCR) crosslinking in the absence of T cell help. We report that immunization with these T cell-independent type 2 (TI-2) antigens causes up-regulation of endogenous retrovirus (ERV) RNAs in antigen-specific mouse B cells. These RNAs are detected via a mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS)-dependent RNA sensing pathway or reverse-transcribed and detected via the cGAS-cGAMP-STING pathway, triggering a second, sustained wave of signaling that promotes specific immunoglobulin M production. Deficiency of both MAVS and cGAS, or treatment of MAVS-deficient mice with reverse transcriptase inhibitors, dramatically inhibits TI-2 antibody responses. These findings suggest that ERV and two innate sensing pathways that detect them are integral components of the TI-2 B cell signaling apparatus.


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