作者
Sonia Tejedor Vaquero,Hadas Neuman,Laura Comerma,Xavi Marcos-Fa,Celia Corral-Vázquez,Mathieu Uzzan,Marc Pybus,Daniel Segura-Garzón,J.E. Castillo Guerra,Lisa Perruzza,Roser Tachó‐Piñot,Jordi Sintes,Adam Rosenstein,E. Grasset,Mar Iglesias,Mònica Gonzàlez‐Farré,Joan Lop,María Evangelina Patriarca-Amiano,Monica Larrubia-Loring,Pablo Santiago Díaz,Júlia Perera-Bel,Pau Berenguer-Molins,Mónica Martínez‐Gallo,Andrea Martín-Nalda,Encarna Varela,Marta Garrido‐Pontnou,Fabio Grassi,Francisco Guarner,Saurabh Mehandru,Lucía Márquez,Ramit Mehr,Andrea Cerutti,Giuliana Magri
摘要
The human gut includes plasma cells (PCs) expressing immunoglobulin A1 (IgA1) or IgA2, two structurally distinct IgA subclasses with elusive regulation, function, and reactivity. We show here that intestinal IgA1+ and IgA2+ PCs co-emerged early in life, comparably accumulated somatic mutations, and were enriched within short-lived CD19+ and long-lived CD19− PC subsets, respectively. IgA2+ PCs were extensively clonally related to IgA1+ PCs and a subset of them presumably emerged from IgA1+ precursors. Of note, secretory IgA1 (SIgA1) and SIgA2 dually coated a large fraction of mucus-embedded bacteria, including Akkermansia muciniphila. Disruption of homeostasis by inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was associated with an increase in actively proliferating IgA1+ plasmablasts, a depletion in long-lived IgA2+ PCs, and increased SIgA1+SIgA2+ gut microbiota. Such increase featured enhanced IgA1 reactivity to pathobionts, including Escherichia coli, combined with depletion of beneficial A. muciniphila. Thus, gut IgA1 and IgA2 emerge from clonally related PCs and show unique changes in both frequency and reactivity in IBD.