Association of B cell profile and receptor repertoire with the progression of Alzheimer’s disease

Jong‐Chan Park(Seoul National University), Jinsung Noh(Seoul National University), Sukjin Jang(Seoul National University), Ki Hyun Kim(Seoul National University), Hayoung Choi(Seoul National University), Dongjoon Lee(Seoul National University), Jieun Kim(Seoul National University), Junho Chung(Seoul National University), Dong Young Lee(Seoul National University), Yonghee Lee(Seoul National University), Hyunho Lee(Seoul National University), Duck Kyun Yoo(Seoul National University), Amos Chungwon Lee(Seoul National University), Min Soo Byun(Seoul National University), Dahyun Yi(Seoul National University Hospital), Sun‐Ho Han(Seoul National University), Sunghoon Kwon(Seoul National University), Inhee Mook‐Jung(Seoul National University)
Cell Reports
September 1, 2022
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent type of dementia. Reports have revealed that the peripheral immune system is linked to neuropathology; however, little is known about the contribution of B lymphocytes in AD. For this longitudinal study, 133 participants are included at baseline and second-year follow-up. Also, we analyze B cell receptor (BCR) repertoire data generated from a public dataset of three normal and 10 AD samples and perform BCR repertoire profiling and pairwise sharing analysis. As a result, longitudinal increase in B lymphocytes is associated with increased cerebral amyloid deposition and hyperactivates induced pluripotent stem cell-derived microglia with loss-of-function for beta-amyloid clearance. Patients with AD share similar class-switched BCR sequences with identical isotypes, despite the high somatic hypermutation rate. Thus, BCR repertoire profiling can lead to the development of individualized immune-based therapeutics and treatment. We provide evidence of both quantitative and qualitative changes in B lymphocytes during AD pathogenesis.


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