6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125ba1b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Double Negative (IgG+IgD-CD27-) B Cells are Increased in a Cohort of Moderate-Severe Alzheimer’s Disease Patients and Show a Pro-Inflammatory Trafficking Receptor Phenotype
Matteo BulatiFrancesco GervasiGiuseppina Colonna-romanoCalogero CarusoSilvio BuffaDelia AzzarelloCecilia CamardaRoberto MonasteroAdriana Martoranasubject
MaleReceptors CCR6Receptors CCR7MyeloidLymphocyteB-Lymphocyte SubsetsC-C chemokine receptor type 7InflammationC-C chemokine receptor type 6Immunoglobulin DCD19Cohort StudiesAlzheimer DiseasemedicineHumansB cellAgedAged 80 and overSettore MED/04 - Patologia GeneralebiologyGeneral NeuroscienceGeneral MedicineImmunoglobulin DFlow CytometryTumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily Member 7Psychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structurePhenotypeAlzheimer's Disease Inflammation B CellsImmunoglobulin GImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaGeriatrics and Gerontologymedicine.symptomMental Status Scheduledescription
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive, irreversible, and debilitating disease for which no effective preventive or disease modifying therapies or treatments have so far been detected. The crucial step in AD pathogenesis is the production of amyloid-42 peptide, which causes chronic inflammation. Activated cells in the central nervous system (CNS) produce pro- inflammatory mediators that lead to the recruitment of myeloid or lymphocytic cells. As a consequence, the communication between the CNS and peripheral blood of AD subjects could influence the lymphocyte distribution and/or the expression of phenotypic markers. In the present paper, we show a significant decrease in total CD19 + B lymphocytes and a remodeling of the B cell subpopulations in moderate-severe AD patients, compared with their coeval healthy controls and mild AD subjects. In particular, we report a significant reduction in na¨ ove B cells (IgD + CD27 − ) and a simultaneous increase in double negative (DN, IgD − CD27 − ) memory B lymphocytes. We have also evaluated the expression of the pro-inflammatory chemokine receptors CCR6 and CCR7 in total and na¨ ove/memory B cells from mild and moderate-severe AD patients, with the aim to detect a possible relationship between the trafficking profile and the stage of the disease. Our results demonstrate that both the amount and the trafficking profile of B cells are related to the severity of AD. The results discussed in this paper suggest a well-selected antibody panel should be used as an additional test for the identification of early AD.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-11-20 |