Extracellular vesicle-microRNA transfer controls germinal center reaction and antibody production
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ABSTRACT: Intercellular communication orchestrates effective immune responses against disease-causing agents. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are potent mediators of cell-cell communication. EVs carry bioactive molecules, including microRNAs, which modulate gene expression and function in the recipient cell. Here, we show that formation of cognate primary T-B lymphocyte immune contacts promotes transfer to the B cell of a very restricted set of T cell EV-microRNAs (mmu-miR20a-5p, mmu-miR-25-3p and mmu-miR-155-3p). Transferred EV-microRNAs target key genes that control B cell function, including the pro-apoptotic BIM and the cell-cycle regulator PTEN. EV-microRNAs transferred in T-B cognate interactions also promote survival, proliferation and antibody class switching. Using mouse chimeras with Rab27KO EV-deficient T cells, we demonstrate that small EV transfer is required for the germinal center reaction and antibody production in vivo, revealing a novel mechanism that controls B cell responses through the transfer of EV-microRNAs of T cell origin. These findings provide mechanistic insight on the Griscelli syndrome, associated with a mutation in the Rab27a gene and may shed light on this pathogenesis and other immune-related and inflammatory disorders. This SuperSeries is composed of the SubSeries listed below.
ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus
PROVIDER: GSE141045 | GEO | 2020/01/20
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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