학술논문

Establishment of fetomaternal tolerance through glycan-mediated B cell suppression
Document Type
article
Source
Nature. 603(7901)
Subject
Pediatric
Contraception/Reproduction
Autoimmune Disease
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Inflammatory and immune system
Good Health and Well Being
Animals
Antigens
Autoimmune Diseases
B-Lymphocytes
Female
Immune Tolerance
Mice
Placenta
Polysaccharides
Pregnancy
Trophoblasts
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Discrimination of self from non-self is fundamental to a wide range of immunological processes1. During pregnancy, the mother does not recognize the placenta as immunologically foreign because antigens expressed by trophoblasts, the placental cells that interface with the maternal immune system, do not activate maternal T cells2. Currently, these activation defects are thought to reflect suppression by regulatory T cells3. By contrast, mechanisms of B cell tolerance to trophoblast antigens have not been identified. Here we provide evidence that glycan-mediated B cell suppression has a key role in establishing fetomaternal tolerance in mice. B cells specific for a model trophoblast antigen are strongly suppressed through CD22-LYN inhibitory signalling, which in turn implicates the sialylated glycans of the antigen as key suppressive determinants. Moreover, B cells mediate the MHC-class-II-restricted presentation of antigens to CD4+ T cells, which leads to T cell suppression, and trophoblast-derived sialoglycoproteins are released into the maternal circulation during pregnancy in mice and humans. How protein glycosylation promotes non-immunogenic placental self-recognition may have relevance to immune-mediated pregnancy complications and to tumour immune evasion. We also anticipate that our findings will bolster efforts to harness glycan biology to control antigen-specific immune responses in autoimmune disease.