Patient Selection
Using our previously described experimental conditions for B cell activation [15], we have to date functionally screened over 40 PAD patients who were suspected or diagnosed with CVID by their clinicians because of their clinical presentation, low serum IgG and IgA, and a lack of humoral response to polysaccharides at presentation.
With this screening assay, we selected a small series of patients who were considered CSR-like CVID cases because of an increased IgM in their serum at diagnosis (more than 2SD above the cutoff for normal values measured at least two times apart) and/or documented “IgM-only” immunoglobulin isotype production in vitro (Tables 1 and 2).
Table 1 Clinical characteristics for CSR-like CVID patients at presentation
Table 2 Clinical characteristics for known CSR patients at presentation
When categorized according to the Freiburg, Paris, and EUROclass classification [17], these CSR-like CVID patients fitted in the B+ CVID patient category with a variable number of memory B cells but without a significant expansion of transitional B cells (Table 3).
Table 3 B cell subset characteristics at time of analysis for CSR patients and CSR-like CVID patients
These selected CVID patients had normal T cell numbers and function upon T cell activation toward anti-CD3, anti-CD3/anti-CD28, IL7, or IL15, as indicated in proliferation assays as described previously (data not shown).
Normal Peripheral Blood B Cell Phenotypes
Within the B cell compartment (CD20+CD19+), various B cell subsets are routinely distinguished, i.e., transitional (CD38highCD24high), naïve (sIgD+CD27−), non-switched (sIgD+CD27+), and switched memory (sIgD−CD27+) B cells. During childhood, the human B cell compartment changes from a completely naive to a more differentiated phenotype as a consequence of the expansion of CD27+ memory B cells. Within the CD27+ memory B cell compartment, surface immunoglobulin receptor expression can be used to further distinguish sIgM+, sIgG+, and sIgA+ memory B cells [18–20]. In the adult PBMC fractions, the B cell phenotype demonstrates the presence of a clear memory B cell compartment including sIgG+ and sIgA+ B cells, both of which are absent in cord blood PBMCs where all B cells are naïve (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. Fig. 1).
Patients with Classical CSR Defects Show Phenotypic Differences in Peripheral B Cells
Patients with genetically well-characterized CSR defects were included (Table 2) for comparison with the five CSR-like CVID patients mentioned earlier (Table 1). Next to cord-blood samples and healthy adult samples, we immunophenotyped the classical CSR cases to directly compare with the CSR-like CVID patients (Table 3). As reported before [8], the circulating B cells in patients with CD40L gene defects consisted of naïve B cells only and no memory B cells. These patients did have a slightly increased number of transitional B cells, similar to cord blood samples. On the other hand, patients who suffered from defects in AICDA showed normal numbers of non-switched B cells and even some memory sIgD−CD27+ B cells that had not undergone any class switching, i.e., these cells did not show any sIgG or sIgA expression and expressed sIgM only. Similar to patients with an AICDA gene defect, the individual that had been identified with an UNG gene defect [15], contained non-switched sIgM+ B cell population in the absence of sIgD−CD27+ B cells, indicating a lack of switched sIgG+ and sIgA+ memory B cells (Table 3).
Plasmablast Formation Upon Activation of Healthy B Cells
The capacity of the B cells to proliferate and differentiate upon in vitro activation in a 6-day culture was tested with CpG in the presence of a small B cell activating dose of IL-2 (to which purified T cells do not show proliferation and cytokine induction and acts by direct B cell activation of the IL-2 receptor) [15, 21]. T cell-dependent B cell stimulation was mimicked by the combination of antibodies against sIgM to trigger the B cell antigen-receptor (BCR) on the majority of circulating B cells in the blood, together with costimulatory CD40 activation and Tfh cell-associated IL-21 (αIgM/αCD40/IL-21) [22]. To check for the T cell function and the indirect effects of T cell proliferation on subsequent B cell activation, we also stimulated the PBMCs with the combination of T cell-specific αCD3/αCD28 MoAbs, in which the common-gamma (CD132)-cytokine receptors play an essential role as we had previously described [18].
In control experiments, we showed that upon activation, the adult B cells proliferated and differentiated into PBs (sIgD−CD27++CD38++) (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. Fig. 2). Cord blood B cells showed similar responses but largely failed to differentiate into PBs after 6 days of stimulation. Both adult and cord blood B cells showed proliferation upon T cell-specific αCD3/αCD28 stimulation. The αCD3/αCD28 activation downregulated sIgD only on adult and not the cord blood B cells after 6 days of culture, but PBs expressing high levels of CD27 or CD38 did not develop under these conditions.
Plasmablast Formation Upon CSR-Defective B Cell Activation
We subsequently analyzed the B cells of the known CSR defect patients. With regard to CD40L-deficient B cells, these cells proliferated normally upon CpG/IL-2 stimulation but B cells could hardly differentiate into CD27++CD38++ PBs. Stimulation with αIgM/αCD40/IL-21 induced vigorous B cell proliferation without any differentiation into PBs at all (Tables 4 and 5). Remarkably, the αCD3/αCD28-mediated T cell activation failed completely to induce any B cell proliferation in both CD40L-deficient patients. Identical responses were found in a CD40-deficient patient, demonstrating the importance of CD40L-CD40 interactions (data not shown).
Table 4 Proliferation, plasmablast differentiation and release of immunoglobulin after 6-day stimulation with CpG/IL-2 of CSR patients and CSR-like CVID patients
Table 5 Proliferation, plasmablast differentiation and release of immunoglobulin after 6-day stimulation with aCD40/IL-21 of CSR patients and CSR-like CVID patients
Stimulation of the B cells of AICDA-mutated patients resulted in a different B cell signature in our B cell cultures. Both B cell proliferation and differentiation into PBs were observed upon activation with CpG/IL-2. In contrast, αIgM/αCD40/IL-21 stimulation induced B cell proliferation but no PB formation—similar to cord blood B cells and the CD40L- or CD40-deficient B cell cultures. With αCD3/αCD28 stimulation, AID-deficient B cells proliferated normally, but did not downregulate sIgD (in contrast to control adult B cells).
The reactivity of B cells of the UNG-mutated patient was an almost complete functional phenocopy of the AICDA-mutated patients. B cells from the UNG-mutated patient showed less proliferation when stimulated with αIgM/αCD40/IL-21, and showed no differentiation into PBs.
Thus, B cells from patients with CD40L or CD40 CSR defects showed an in vitro pattern of proliferation and differentiation responses different from AID or UNG-defective B cells (Tables 4 and 5).
In Vitro Release of Immunoglobulins in Case of Known CSR Defects
Both IgG and IgM were measured in the supernatants of the 6-day cultures (Fig. 3). Stimulation with CpG/IL-2 resulted in the production of IgG and IgM by adult B cells, but only IgM was produced by cord blood B cells.
Since stimulation of the cell cultures with αIgM/αCD40/IL-21 makes the detection of IgM unreliable because of the addition of αIgM, we changed to stimulation with αCD40/IL-21 alone, resulting in similar B cell proliferation and PB differentiation in adult control cells (data not shown). Both αIgM/αCD40/IL-21 and αCD40/IL-21 stimulation resulted in the release of IgG in control PBMC cultures but—as expected—not in cord blood-derived samples. Noticeably, we did not detect any IgM release with αCD40/IL-21 stimulation. Although strong proliferation was induced upon αCD3/αCD28 stimulation, neither adult nor cord blood B cells produced IgG or IgM under these conditions.
As expected, none of the B cell cultures performed with PBMCs from CSR-deficient patients produced any IgG in vitro for all the conditions tested. In contrast, CpG/IL-2 stimulation resulted in massive IgM release in 6-day cultures by the cells from patients with mutations in UNG or AICDA, and to a lesser extent by those with the CD40L mutations (Table 4). B cells of patients with an AICDA defect were unique in their capacity to produce IgM when stimulated with αCD40/IL-21, in contrast to B cells from other genetically characterized CSR defects or from any of the normal controls tested thus far (over 100 individuals to date).
Diagnostic Categorization of Unidentified CSR-like CVID
The patients had normal or increased serum IgM in vivo, apart from patient #1, who had no detectable IgM in serum. All patients had circulating B cells that produced relatively large amounts of IgM without any IgG and IgA upon in vitro activation.
Their B cell functionality was compared to the B cell cultures of our patients with known CSR defects (Fig. 3, Tables 4 and 5). One of the selected CSR-like CVID patients had a child with exactly the same immunophenotype and clinical diagnostic features (patient #2). In all of these patients, classical CSR defects were excluded, i.e., phenotypic or genetic defects in CD40L, CD40, AICDA, UNG, or the recently identified PI3K defects, established in Activated PI3K-p110delta syndrome, types 1 and 2 (APDS-1 and APDS-2, caused by a number of gain-of-function mutations in PIK3CD and PIK3R1, respectively) [23–25].
The immunophenotype of the peripheral circulating B cells of these CVID patients was compared to the B cell phenotype of the patients with classical CSR defects (Fig. 4). Three of our patients (patients #1, #2, and #3) looked very similar to those with an AICDA or UNG defect, i.e., their B cell compartment comprised of naïve and non-switched B cells only, with very few if any switched memory B cells. The other two patients (patients #4 and #5) resembled the CD40L-deficient patients, i.e., completely naïve in their B cell compartment without any circulating non-switched and switched CD27+ memory B cells.
Also, after stimulation with CpG/IL-2 and αCD40/IL-21 (Table 4 and 5), our results showed that patients #1, #2, and #3 mostly resembled the B cell-intrinsic AID/UNG-deficient patients, i.e., the B cells proliferated under all conditions of B cell activation tested and induced proper B cell differentiation and IgM production in vitro upon CpG/IL-2 activation.
On the other hand, patients #4 and #5 behaved differently. Patient #4 again resembled the CD40L-deficient patients with a normal proliferation upon CpG/IL-2 stimulation and αIgM/αCD40/IL-21 but without any PB differentiation. However, this patient’s B cells demonstrated a completely normal B cell proliferation upon T cell activation with αCD3/αCD28 which was absent with CD40L- or CD40-deficient B cells (Fig. 2 and data not shown).
In contrast to the other CSR-like cases as well as the classical CSR patients, the B cells of patient #5, who presented with an elevated serum IgM upon diagnosis, repeatedly showed a lack of proliferation upon any kind of B cell stimulation and failed to differentiate to PBs with almost no IgM production (6–10 % of control values) and IgG (or IgA) production, hence not resembling any of the tested CSR patients.