NADPH oxidase in B cells and macrophages protects against murine lupus by regulation of TLR7.

Rachael A Gordon, Haylee A Cosgrove,Anthony Marinov, Sebastien Gingras,Jeremy S Tilstra,Allison M Campbell,Sheldon I Bastacky,Michael Kashgarian, Andras Perl, Kevin M Nickerson, Mark J Shlomchik

JCI insight(2024)

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Abstract
Loss of NADPH oxidase (NOX2) exacerbates systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in mice and humans, but the mechanisms underlying this effect remain unclear. To identify the cell lineages in which NOX2 deficiency drives SLE, we employed conditional knockout (KO) and chimera approaches to delete Cybb in several hematopoietic cell lineages of MRL.Faslpr lupus-prone mice. Deletion of Cybb in macrophages/monocytes exacerbated lupus nephritis, though not to the degree observed in the Cybb global KOs. Unexpectedly, the absence of Cybb in B cells resulted in profound glomerulonephritis and interstitial nephritis, rivaling that seen with global deletion. Further, we identified that NOX2 is a key regulator of TLR7, a driver of SLE pathology, both globally and specifically in B cells. This is mediated in part through suppression of TLR7-mediated NF-kB signaling in B cells. Thus, NOX2's immunomodulatory effect in SLE is orchestrated not only by its function in the myeloid compartment, but through a pivotal role in B cells by selectively inhibiting TLR7 signaling.
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