Phenotypically distinct anti-insulin B cells repopulate pancreatic islets after anti-CD20 treatment in NOD mice.
| Citation | Boldison, Joanne, et al. “Phenotypically Distinct Anti-Insulin B Cells Repopulate Pancreatic Islets After Anti-CD20 Treatment in NOD Mice”. 2019. Diabetologia, vol. 62, no. 11, 2019, pp. 2052–2065.  | 
       
| Center | Yale University | 
| Author | Joanne Boldison, Larissa C Da Rosa, Lucy Buckingham, Joanne Davies, Li Wen, Susan Wong | 
| Keywords | Anti-CD20 treatment, Anti-insulin B cells, type 1 diabetes | 
| Abstract | 
   AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Autoreactive B cells escape immune tolerance and contribute to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes. While global B cell depletion is a successful therapy for autoimmune disease, the fate of autoreactive cells during this treatment in autoimmune diabetes is unknown. We aimed to identify and track anti-insulin B cells in pancreatic islets and understand their repopulation after anti-CD20 treatment. METHODS: We generated a double transgenic system, the VH125.hCD20/NOD mouse. The VH125 transgenic mouse, expressing an increased frequency of anti-insulin B cells, was crossed with a human CD20 (hCD20) transgenic mouse, to facilitate B cell depletion using anti-CD20. B cells were analysed using multiparameter and ImageStream flow cytometry. RESULTS: We demonstrated that anti-insulin B cells were recruited to the pancreas during disease progression in VH125.hCD20/NOD mice. We identified two distinct populations of anti-insulin B cells in pancreatic islets, based on CD19 expression, with both populations enriched in the CD138 fraction. Anti-insulin B cells were not identified in the plasma-cell CD138 fraction, which also expressed the transcription factor Blimp-1. After anti-CD20 treatment, anti-insulin B cells repopulated the pancreatic islets earlier than non-specific B cells. Importantly, we observed that a CD138insulinCD19 population was particularly enriched after B cell depletion, possibly contributing to the persistence of disease still observed in some mice after anti-CD20 treatment. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Our observations may indicate why the loss of C-peptide is only temporarily delayed following anti-CD20 treatment in human type 1 diabetes.  | 
        
| Year of Publication | 
   2019 
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| Journal | 
   Diabetologia 
           | 
        
| Volume | 
   62 
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| Issue | 
   11 
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| Number of Pages | 
   2052-2065 
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| Date Published | 
   12/2019 
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| ISSN Number | 
   1432-0428 
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| DOI | 
   10.1007/s00125-019-04974-y 
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| Alternate Journal | 
   Diabetologia 
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| PMCID | 
   PMC6805803 
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| PMID | 
   31444529 
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