DOCK8-expressing Tfh cells cause SLE: autoimmunity via repeated TCR stimulation by antigen to levels that surpass system's self-organized criticality

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY(2021)

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Abstract
Abstract INTRODUCTION: The cause of autoimmunity remains unclear. Candidate pathogens including autoantigens all failed to induce, exist in, or heal upon their removal the prototypical autoimmune disease, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We here investigated, instead of antigen, the immune response of host that recognized antigen. METHODS: We test the integrity of host’s immune response by stimulating TCR maximally to levels that surpass the limit of host’s steady-state immune response, self-organized criticality, by an antigen. RESULTS: After repeated stimulation by any immunogenic antigen, SLE was induced in mice normally not prone to autoimmune disease, wherein a novel T follicular helper (Tfh) cell type expressing the guanine nucleotide exchange factor DOCK8 on the cell surface was newly generated via resuscitation from antigen-induced anergy. DOCK8+ Tfh cells passed through TCR revision at the periphery, and induced a variety of autoantibodies and the lesion characteristic of SLE. They existed in splenic red pulp and in the circulation of active patients with SLE, which subsequently declined after conventional therapy. Lupus lesions of mice and the classical (NZBxNZW) F1 model mice were mostly cured by anti-DOCK8 antibody. CONCLUSION: Thus, disruption of host’s steady-state immune response by repeated TCR stimulation by immunogenic pathogen, either exogenous or endogenous, results in generation of DOCK8-expressing Tfh cells that cause autoantibodies and SLE.
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