Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
Understanding cellular and molecular events in diabetes mellitus will identify new approaches for therapy. Immune system cells are important modulators of chronic inflammation in diabetes mellitus, but the role of B cells is not adequately studied. The aim of this work was to define the function of B cells in diabetes mellitus patients through focus on B cell responses to pattern recognition receptors.
Methods
We measured expression and function of Toll-like receptors (TLRs) on peripheral blood B cells from diabetes mellitus patients by flow cytometry and multiplexed cytokine analysis. We similarly analysed B cells from non-diabetic donors and periodontal disease patients as comparative cohorts.
Results
B cells from diabetes mellitus patients secrete multiple pro-inflammatory cytokines, and IL-8 production is significantly elevated in B cells from diabetic patients compared with those from non-diabetic individuals. These data, plus modest elevation of TLR surface expression, suggest B cell IL-8 hyperproduction is a cytokine-specific outcome of altered TLR function in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients. Altered TLR function is further evidenced by demonstration of an unexpected, albeit modest ‘anti-inflammatory’ function for TLR4. Importantly, B cells from diabetes mellitus patients fail to secrete IL-10, an anti-inflammatory cytokine implicated in inflammatory disease resolution, under a variety of TLR-stimulating conditions. Comparative analyses of B cells from patients with a second chronic inflammatory disease, periodontal disease, indicated that some alterations in B cell TLR function associate specifically with diabetes mellitus.
Conclusions/interpretation
Altered TLR function in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients increases inflammation by two mechanisms: elevation of pro-inflammatory IL-8 and lack of anti-inflammatory/protective IL-10 production.
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Introduction
Chronic inflammation characterises a wide range of disorders, including diabetes mellitus, and associates with diabetes mellitus aetiology and co-morbidities such as cardiovascular disease [1–3]. Inflammation and insulin resistance in diabetes mellitus patients is thought to stem, at least in part, from an ongoing immune response to ligands that include endogenous NEFAs and endotoxin [4–6].
Cells of the innate immune system sense many endogenous ligands and bacterial products through Toll-like receptors (TLRs). TLRs play important roles in diabetes mellitus, as shown both in humans and in animal models of diabetes mellitus. For example, mice with an inactive Tlr4 gene were significantly less prone to diet-induced insulin resistance [7, 8]. Likewise, inhibition of TLR2 function in mice exposed to a high-fat diet led to improved insulin sensitivity and decreased activation of pro-inflammatory pathways [9]. Furthermore, polymorphisms in TLRs and in members of TLR-downstream signalling pathways that encode hyper- or hypoactive responses predict the development of type 1 and type 2 diabetes [10–12]. Overall, these studies support the idea that TLR2 and TLR4 activities promote diabetes mellitus. It is generally assumed that cells of the myeloid lineage are predominantly responsible for the demonstrated effect of TLRs in diabetes mellitus. However, B cell TLRs have also been recognised as important mediators of innate immune responses in inflammatory diseases [13, 14].
Human B cells express multiple TLRs and can produce both pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines in response to TLR ligands [15–18]. The most commonly studied B cell TLR is TLR9, which mediates B cell response to CpG. B cells from healthy humans, in contrast to mice, generally express little to no surface TLR2 and TLR4 [15, 16, 19, 20]. However, our recent work demonstrated that B cells from chronic inflammatory disease patients, specifically periodontal disease (PD) patients, have elevated responses to TLR2 and TLR4 ligands compared with B cells from healthy donors [13, 19]. These studies also showed that cross-talk between TLRs differentially regulates cytokine production by B cells from patients compared with healthy donors. Overall, this work highlighted the complexity and elegant specificity of the B cell response to TLR ligands, and suggested that B cell TLR expression and downstream cytokine production influences the overall milieu in chronic inflammation. Our studies introduced B cell TLRs and TLR-downstream cytokine production as potential players in chronic non-autoimmune inflammatory disease for the first time. Based on high incidence of PD in diabetes mellitus patients, these studies raised the possibility that B cells may also play roles in the systemic inflammation characterising diabetes mellitus.
The B cell cytokine most commonly implicated in chronic inflammatory diseases is IL-10. IL-10 is generally an anti-inflammatory cytokine that promotes inflammation resolution. B cell IL-10 has specifically been implicated in inflammatory autoimmune diseases characterised by B cell dysfunction. For example, B cells from multiple sclerosis (MS) patients secrete lower levels of IL-10 than B cells from healthy donors, and secretion increases in patients treated palliatively with mitoxantrone. These data suggest that B cell IL-10 production decreases clinical symptoms [21]. IL-10-secreting B cells from healthy donors, but not lupus patients, also block Th1 differentiation [22]. Furthermore, B cell IL-10 is critical for recovery from arthritis and a mouse version of MS (experimental autoimmune encephalitis [23, 24]). Finally, genetic studies have linked elevated IL-10 levels to protection from metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus in humans [25], and thus indicate IL-10 can protect against a wide array of chronic inflammatory diseases. Importantly, recent studies demonstrated that B cells specifically require TLRs to produce the IL-10 that blocks T cell-mediated inflammation [26]. Whether similar B cell TLR responses regulate IL-10 production by B cells from diabetes mellitus patients is untested.
Differences between TLR expression and function in B cells from chronic inflammatory disease patients [13, 27] led us to question how B cell TLRs function in diabetes mellitus patients. We demonstrate that TLR ligands activate B cell cytokine production, most significantly IL-8, in diabetes mellitus vs non-diabetic (ND) donors. Pro-inflammatory cytokine production is likely to be physiologically bolstered by the complete inability of B cells from diabetes mellitus patients to upregulate IL-10 secretion in response to TLR ligands. Surprisingly, the B cell response to combinations of TLR ligands uncovered further disease-associated changes in TLR function. These results indicate that altered TLR function rather than surface expression levels regulate the B cell contribution to diabetes mellitus. The unexpected anti-inflammatory function of TLR4 coupled with signatures more characteristic of pro-inflammatory cells indicates that fundamental alterations in B cell responses play complex, overall pro-inflammatory roles in systemic inflammation in diabetes mellitus.
Methods
Cells
Human samples were obtained after informed consent under a protocol approved by the Boston University Institutional Review Board and conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. We analysed cells from a cross-sectional group of diabetes mellitus patients recruited from the Center for Endocrinology, Diabetes and Nutrition at Boston Medical Center. The cohort excluded individuals with common infections ≤2 weeks prior to donation or those with non-diabetes mellitus related inflammatory or auto-immune disease. Diabetes mellitus patients were defined as: (1) under the care of a Center for Diabetes provider; (2) on one or more diabetes medications; and (3) having a diagnosis of diabetes on the clinical problem list. C-reactive protein (CRP) was measured at the time of blood draw as an established biomarker of systemic inflammation in metabolic disease [28]. Approximately 50% of the diabetes mellitus patients would be considered average risk and several as high risk for cardiovascular disease, as previously defined by CRP [29]. Peripheral blood was collected into heparinised tubes by venous puncture and B cells were purified as published [19]. The majority of contaminating cells in the >96% pure B cell preparations were T cells; monocyte contamination was undetectable. Table 1 outlines the diabetes mellitus patients (n = 11; nine with type 2 diabetes, two with type 1 diabetes but lacking autoimmune antibodies) who provided blood B cells for cytokine analyses. B cells were also provided by ND PD patients who had diagnoses of localised aggressive periodontitis [30] but no other known disease. These patients (n = 14) were recruited from the Clinical Research Center at Boston University Medical Center (Table 2). A detailed description of PD is published in Shin et al. [19]. Healthy donors had no indication of metabolic disease or PD excepting mild gingivitis (n = 19; Table 2). None of the participants smoked.
Flow cytometry
For surface staining, 100 μl whole blood (coded to avoid bias) was labelled with conjugated antibodies purchased from BD Pharmingen (San Diego, CA, USA: anti-CD3, -CD14, -CD19, -CD23, -CD27, -CD38, -CD69, -CD77 and -RP105) or eBioscience (San Diego, CA, USA: anti-TLR4 and isotype controls). Erythrocytes were lysed with 2 ml 1×FACS Lysing Solution for 30 min. Cells were washed with 0.2% (wt/vol.) BSA/PBS and fixed with 2% (wt/vol.) paraformaldehyde, then analysed on a FACSCaliber (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA, USA) with WinMDI software (J. Trotter, The Scripps Institute, Palo Alto, CA, USA). Intracellular staining was completed on mononuclear fractions incubated in medium or with anti-Igμ for 24 h. Brefeldin A (eBioscience) was added at 21 h. Cells were stained with anti-CD14 or anti-CD19 for 20 min at 4°C, then washed with 0.2% (wt/vol.) BSA/PBS, and treated with Fixation buffer then 1× Permeabilisation buffer (eBioscience). Cells were then stained with anti-TNF-α, anti-IL-10 (eBioscience) or anti-IL-8 (BD Pharmingen), and washed with 1× Permeabilisation buffer. Resuspended cells were analysed on a FACScan (BD Biosciences) with CellQuest (BD Biosciences) and FloJo (Tree Star, Ashland, OR, USA) software.
Biochemistry
B cells were negatively isolated with magnetic beads (Miltenyi, Auburn, CA, USA) and rested (1 h 37°C) before stimulation. Cultures were 250,000 cells/250 μl in U-bottom wells. For constitutive cytokine production, B cells were incubated in complete medium (RPMI, 10% [vol./vol.] heat-inactivated FCS) alone. Alternatively, TLR ligands, or anti-Igμ/anti-CD40 were each added to a concentration of 1 μg/ml. TLR ligands (Invivogen; San Diego, CA, USA) were: Pam3CSK4 (Pam3; TLR2 ligand), Rhodobacter sphaeroides lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (rLPS; TLR4 ligand [31]), CpG oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) 2006 (TLR9 ligand) and ultrapure E. coli LPS 0111:B4 (TLR4 ligand). Cells were stimulated for 24 h prior to cytokine analysis with an Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA, USA) kit that measured IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IFN-γ, TNF-α and granulocyte/macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) on a Luminex 200 machine (Luminex, Austin, TX, USA). Chromatin accessibility by real-time PCR (CHART-PCR) was completed as published [32].
Statistics
The Mann–Whitney U test was used to compare values between cohorts. Paired non-parametric (Wilcoxon) t tests established significance for cytokine production by variously stimulated B cells from the same individual. p < 0.05 established significance. Analyses were performed on Prism (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA). Sample numbers varied because of the variable number of B cells isolated per donor.
Results
B cells from diabetes mellitus patients constitutively secrete IL-8
B cells are important sources of multiple cytokines in vivo [21, 23]. We reasoned that if B cell cytokines play a role in systemic inflammation in diabetes mellitus, fresh ex vivo B cells from diabetes mellitus vs ND donors should differentially produce cytokines. We analysed constitutive cytokine production by highly purified populations of B cells, devoid of monocytes (Fig. 1a). Additional measures, previously described [13], ensured even small numbers of theoretically contaminating monocytes contributed <10% of total measured cytokines in these assays. B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors constitutively secreted similar levels of GM-CSF and IL-6 (Fig. 1b). In contrast, B cells from diabetes mellitus vs ND donors constitutively secreted significantly lower levels of TNF-α and the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 (Fig. 1b), but significantly higher levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokine (and neutrophil chemokine) IL-8 (Fig. 1c). Intracellular staining data confirmed that cytokines originated from the CD19+ B cell population (Fig. 1d). Importantly, comparison of intracellular cytokine staining for B cells vs monocytes from the same individuals show that B cells from diabetes mellitus patients are uniquely defective for IL-10 production (Fig. 1d, e). For all cytokine analyses, results from patients with type 1 (n = 2) and type 2 (n = 9) diabetes were indistinguishable (data not shown). These data support the conclusion that B cells from diabetes mellitus patients make a significantly different contribution to the circulating balance of cytokines than B cells from ND donors. The mixed anti-inflammatory (lower TNF-α production) and pro-inflammatory (decreased IL-10 and increased IL-8 production) signature suggests that B cells may play an unappreciated role in the chronic inflammation of diabetes mellitus.
A modestly elevated percentage of B cells from diabetes mellitus patients express surface TLR4
Monocytes produce IL-8 in response to ligands that engage TLR2 or TLR4 [13, 20]. These findings raise the possibility that constitutive B cell IL-8 production (Fig. 1c) may stem from chronic TLR engagement in vivo. However, multiple studies have shown human B cells respond poorly to TLR2 and TLR4 ligands, probably because of low surface expression of their receptors [16, 19, 33]. We therefore speculated diabetes mellitus B cells constitutively secrete high levels of IL-8 owing to elevated expression of surface TLRs that allow increased engagement by endogenous ligands. We first measured surface levels of TLR4 on B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors in whole blood as shown in Fig. 2a. The median percentage of TLR4-positive B cells from the diabetes mellitus cohort (Fig. 2b, 27.1%) was significantly higher (∼60%, p = 0.024) than the median percentage of TLR4-positive B cells from healthy individuals (16.5%). The mean fluorescence intensity (MFI), an indication of the number of cell surface TLR4 molecules, was similar between the two cohorts (not shown). This modest increase in the percentage of surface TLR4-positive B cells in diabetes mellitus patients is consistent with the demonstration that the TLR4 promoter is packaged into an equivalently accessible chromatin structure in B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors (Fig. 2c). Notably, preliminary detailed flow cytometric analyses showed TLR4 was globally upregulated on all circulating B cell subsets ([33] and data not shown). Furthermore, we detected no overall differences in the distribution of B cell subpopulations in ND vs diabetes mellitus donors for a standard group of human B cell surface markers (not shown). Percentages of TLR4-positive B cells did not correlate with age, BMI, PD or statin use in preliminary analysis of confounding factors (not shown). Importantly, the percentage of TLR4-expressing blood monocytes (CD14+ cells) or neutrophils (CD14lowCD63lowMac-1high) was similar between diabetes mellitus and ND donors (Fig. 2d), suggesting that modestly increased percentages of TLR4-positive B cells (Fig. 2b) was cell-type limited. Note that the monocyte data contrast with reports showing increased TLR4 expression on purified monocytes from newly diagnosed patients with type 2 diabetes [34], raising the possibility that either diabetic drugs taken by our diabetes mellitus cohort, or activation of monocytes during processing in the cited work may influence monocyte TLR4 levels. Regardless, B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors expressed indistinguishable surface levels of RP105, an alternative LPS receptor, as measured by MFI (Fig. 2e) or percentage of positive cells (>95% for both cohorts, not shown). Furthermore, our published analyses showed no difference in the percentage of TLR2-positive B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors [20]. These modest/insignificant changes in surface TLR expression on B cells from diabetes mellitus patients suggest that if constitutive IL-8 production is TLR-dependent, changes in TLR function rather than TLR expression may play a role in diabetes mellitus inflammation.
TLR2 and TLR4 ligands regulate B cell cytokine production
To identify diabetes mellitus-associated differences in B cell TLR function, we stimulated purified B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors with model TLR ligands and measured cytokine production. Pam3/TLR2 activation of B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors showed that diabetes mellitus B cells produced significantly increased levels of IL-8 (Fig. 3a). The TLR-activated IL-8 levels produced by B cells were in the same range as levels of IL-8 production reported for monocytes [35]. B cells from diabetic patients, but not healthy donors, also produced IL-8 in response to anti-Igμ stimulation (Fig. 3b), indicating diabetes mellitus B cells may be abnormally poised to produce IL-8. TLR2 ligand significantly increased production of multiple cytokines by diabetes mellitus B cells (Table 3), but this increase was not greater than that observed for B cells from ND donors (Fig. 3c, d), and increased IL-10 production (to ∼10 pg/ml) was quantitatively meagre. These results are consistent with published data showing ND B cells respond modestly to TLR2 stimulation [33]. In addition, B cells from diabetes mellitus vs ND donors responded to the TLR4 ligand rLPS by producing elevated levels of IL-8. By contrast, B cells from the two cohorts produced similar levels of other cytokines tested (Fig. 3a, c, d). Under all conditions, B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors produced undetectable levels of IL-2, -4, -5 and IFN-γ (not shown), consistent with the interpretation that T cells, the major contaminant of B cell preparations (<2%) insignificantly contributed to TLR-induced cytokine production. Overall, these data support the idea that elevated constitutive IL-8 production shown for diabetes mellitus B cells in Fig. 1c could result from in vivo hyperresponse to TLR2 and/or TLR4 ligand, in the absence of highly elevated surface TLR expression (Fig. 2b and Noronha et al. [20]).
To further test the possibility that IL-8 is uniquely poised for TLR-mediated activation in diabetes mellitus B cells, we expanded our analysis of TLR-responsive cytokines by first measuring cytokine production in B cells responding to the prototypic TLR4 ligand E. coli LPS. Although B cells from diabetes mellitus donors produce significant amounts of IL-8 in response to E. coli LPS (>2 ng/ml on average; Fig. 3a), B cells from both diabetes mellitus and ND donors responded similarly to E. coli LPS (Fig. 3e) as indicated by quantification of GM-CSF, IL-1β and TNF-α production. Note that high variability in values from ND donor B cells prevented direct comparison with IL-8 production by ND B cells (not shown). The overall response of all B cells to E. coli LPS (not shown) was relatively modest (i.e. <200 pg/ml cytokine, Fig. 3e), consistent with the general dogma that human B cells fail to respond vigorously to this TLR4 ligand. This lack of response is probably due to, at least in part, the lack of the LPS delivery molecule CD14 on the B cell surface (data not shown). Importantly, E. coli LPS failed to activate even modest production of IL-10 by B cells from diabetes mellitus donors, instead stimulating levels that were lower than levels produced by ND B cells (Fig. 3e). We conclude that diabetes mellitus-associated differences in B cell TLR function specifically increase IL-8 production (Fig. 3a), but are not ‘generally’ pro-inflammatory as measured by diabetogenic cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-1β [13]. Furthermore, the data suggest that B cells from diabetes mellitus patients are deficient in anti-inflammatory IL-10 production.
TLR engagement can activate B cell IL-10 production, which is critical for inflammatory disease resolution [26]. To more rigorously test the possibility that B cells from diabetes mellitus patients fail to produce IL-10 in response to TLR engagement, we measured IL-10 production by diabetes mellitus and ND B cells responding to a more comprehensive panel of TLR ligands. In contrast to B cells from ND donors, B cells from diabetic patients fail to activate even modest IL-10 production (>20 pg/ml) in response to TLR2 (Pam3) or TLR4 (rLPS) ligand (Fig. 4a). The latter finding is consistent with decreased IL-10 response in diabetes mellitus vs ND B cells stimulated by E. coli LPS (Fig. 3e). More surprisingly, B cells from diabetes mellitus patients fail to produce IL-10 in response to CpG, a TLR9 ligand known to activate ND B cells (Fig. 4a). As a control, we confirmed that CpG equivalently activates B cells from diabetes mellitus and ND donors to produce GM-CSF, TNF-α and IL-6, and that CpG-triggered pathways that activate cytokine production are fundamentally intact in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients (Fig. 4b and Table 3). These data support one of two possible interpretations: TLR engagement fails to activate IL-10 production, or TLR engagement actively represses IL-10 production by B cells from diabetes mellitus donors. Our preliminary data showing IL-10 is not produced by B cells from diabetes mellitus patients responding to anti-Igμ plus CD40 (n = 6; not shown) support the possibility of TLR-independent defects in IL-10 activation in these cells.
TNF-α is uniquely regulated by TLR4 engagement in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients
Many endogenous and pathogen-associated pro-inflammatory ligands activate innate immune system cells through combinations of TLR2 and TLR4 ligands [36], or ligands that may be able engage either TLR2 or TLR4, such as the fatty acid palmitate [5, 37]. These findings raise the possibility that differences in TLR4 function play an important role in responses to more complex ligands in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients. To model B cell interactions with complex ligands and to further identify alterations in TLR function in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients, we co-stimulated cells with Pam3 and rLPS to simultaneously activate TLR2 and TLR4. We then compared cytokine production in B cells stimulated with Pam3 alone vs the two-ligand combination. For some cytokines, rLPS (TLR4 ligand) significantly decreased Pam3 (TLR2)-mediated cytokine production by B cells from both diabetes mellitus and ND donors (GM-CSF; IL-6; Fig. 5a, c, g; note that differences in panel e trended toward significance). However, rLPS significantly decreased TLR2-mediated TNF-α production in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients, but failed to consistently alter TNF-α production by B cells from ND donors (Fig. 5d, h). Importantly, B cells from diabetes mellitus patients fail to secrete IL-10 even in the presence of dual stimuli, further supporting the conclusion that IL-10 production is uncoupled from TLR-downstream pathways only in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients (Fig. 5b, f). The quantitative decrease in TNF-α production by B cells from diabetes mellitus patients caused by TLR4 engagement is modest (∼30% decrease). Nonetheless, these findings support the conclusion that TLR4 function is fundamentally altered in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients. Furthermore, the data reveal the specificity by which altered TLR function regulates B cells.
The TLR ligand response of B cells from diabetes mellitus patients is disease-influenced
B cells from multiple chronic inflammatory diseases, including PD, secrete cytokines in response to TLR engagement [13]. Because many diabetes mellitus patients have confounding PD, we asked whether responses of B cells from diabetic and ND PD patients are similar. Although TLR-induced production of some cytokines by B cells from diabetic vs PD patients was statistically indistinguishable (Fig. 6a, c; GM-CSF and IL-6, respectively), only B cells from PD patients produced IL-10 in response to all stimuli tested (Fig. 6b). Furthermore, IL-8 responses to TLR4 and TLR9 ligand were quantitatively lower in B cells from diabetes mellitus compared with PD patients (Fig. 6d). Finally, B cells from PD vs diabetes mellitus patients produce significantly more TNF-α in response to TLR4 ligand (Fig. 6e). The TNF-α results are consistent with the demonstration that TLR4 ligand decreases TLR2-stimulated TNF-α production by B cells from diabetes mellitus (Fig. 5) but not PD [13] donors. Furthermore, the overall increase in pro-inflammatory responses of B cells from PD patients supports the probability that the differences in the age of the cohorts (PD and ND median age is indistinguishable but diabetes mellitus patients are significantly older; Tables 1 and 2) cannot explain all pro-inflammatory changes in patient B cells. Finally, differences in the subcategory of PD in our defined PD cohort vs our periodontally undefined diabetes mellitus cohort may underlie differences in B cell cytokine production. We conclude that disease pathology influences the B cell response to TLR ligands. These data further show that lack of B cell IL-10 production is specific to diabetes mellitus.
Discussion
Taken together, our data indicate that altered TLR function in B cells from diabetes mellitus patients affects cytokine production, and highlights the elegant specificity of TLR-mediated outcomes of B cell activation in disease. Importantly, surface TLR expression may not be the best predictor of B cell cytokine production in diabetes mellitus. The final outcomes of TLR-activated cytokine production by diabetes mellitus B cells are, on balance, pro-inflammatory: increased IL-8 and decreased IL-10, which may override quantitatively small decreases in TNF-α. Although the precise ratio of pro- to anti-inflammatory cytokines required to promote chronic inflammation is unknown, our data clearly indicate that the B cell contribution to the overall ratio is significantly altered in diabetes mellitus and may, for at least IL-8 and IL-10, rival the importance of monocytes as cytokine producers. The complex contribution of B cells and B cell TLRs to diabetes mellitus inflammation is reminiscent of the mixed contribution of T cells to inflammation in diet-induced obesity, in which CD8 T cells promote pathology, but regulatory T cells block pathology [38–40].
Elevated IL-8 production by B cells from diabetes mellitus patients was unexpected, but may link B cells to disease pathogenesis based on several studies implicating IL-8 in diabetes mellitus. IL-8 levels are elevated in serum and in the adipose-associated stromal vascular fraction of diabetes mellitus patients, but the cellular source of IL-8 was not identified by these studies [41, 42]. B cell IL-8 may also play a role in IL-8-associated complications of diabetes mellitus, such as vascular disease [43]. This possibility is further supported by data showing palliative treatments that decrease IL-8 levels in vivo appear to have benefits for insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk factors [44]. Taken together, these studies suggest that elevated IL-8 production by B cells from diabetes mellitus patients may have important implications in diabetes pathogenesis. The concomitant decrease in B cell IL-10 production undoubtedly skews the pro- to anti-inflammatory cytokine ratio even further to promote an inflammatory milieu. Although B cells produce lower levels of TNF-α either constitutively or in response to TLR4 ligand (following TLR2 stimulation), the absolute changes in TNF-α production are modest in both assays. Therefore we predict these results hold value as indicators of altered TLR function in diabetes mellitus B cells, but may not identify critical quantitative changes in this diabetes-linked cytokine [45]. The simplistic dogma that TLR-mediated nuclear factor kappa B translocation activates cytokines must be significantly refined to facilitate the design of new diabetes mellitus treatments that exploit knowledge of the highly specific mechanisms that control TLR-activated cytokine production.
Clinical treatments that attempt to decrease inflammation in diabetes mellitus patients have had variable results [46–48], perhaps caused in part by a lack of appreciation of non-conventional functions of B cells and B cell TLRs defined herein. Apart from the role B cells may play in diabetes mellitus, B cells certainly play significant roles in vaccine responses. Therefore, the current push to exploit TLR ligands in vaccine adjuvants, some of which will inevitably be used in the growing population of diabetes mellitus patients, makes understanding the responses of these patient B cells and changes in B cell TLR function more broadly important. Both treatment and vaccine strategies must take into account the net effect of TLR action, including unexpected sources of TLR activity, to most effectively harness the promise of immune system modulation in chronic inflammatory disease patients.
Abbreviations
- CRP:
-
C-reactive protein
- GM-CSF:
-
Granulocyte/macrophage colony stimulating factor
- LPS:
-
Lipopolysaccharide
- MFI:
-
Mean fluorescence intensity
- ND:
-
Non-diabetic
- ODN:
-
Oligodeoxynucleotide
- Pam3:
-
Pam3CSK4
- PD:
-
Periodontal disease
- rLPS:
-
Rhodobacter sphaeroides lipopolysaccharide
- TLR:
-
Toll-like receptor
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Acknowledgements
We thank A. Marshak-Rothstein, R. Corley, M. Clare-Salzler and W. Harnett for manuscript critiques. C. Apovian and A. Bourland generously provided samples for intracellular cytokine analyses. We thank M. Rarick and P. Skolnik from the Center for HIV/AIDS at Boston University Medical Center for use and technical expertise with the multiplex analyser, and G. Denis at the flow core facility at Boston University School of Medicine for expertise in intracellular staining. This work was supported by R01 AI54611 and a Research Grant from the American Diabetes Association (B. S. Nikolajczyk), the Evans Medical Foundation and The Broad Medical Foundation (L. M. Ganley-Leal), DE018917 (H. Hasturk) and DE15566 (T. E. Van Dyke, A. Kantarci and H. Hasturk).
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Jagannathan, M., McDonnell, M., Liang, Y. et al. Toll-like receptors regulate B cell cytokine production in patients with diabetes. Diabetologia 53, 1461–1471 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-010-1730-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-010-1730-z