Low frequency of IL-10-producing B cells and high density of ILC2s contribute to the pathological process in Graves' disease, which may be related to elevated-TRAb levels.

In this study, we analyzed the frequencies of B10, Treg cells and ILC2s, as well as the expression of related cytokines in peripheral blood from patients with Graves' disease and evaluated the correlation between B10 cell numbers and autoantibodies level. Our data showed that the frequency of B10 or Treg cells was significantly decreased in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from Graves' disease patients, while the percentage of ILC2s cells was increased; the levels of cytokine IL-5, IL-13 and related transcription factor RORĪ± were up-regulated. Autoantibodies analysis also showed that high level of TRAb was accompanied by low rates of B10 cells in patients, there was a negative correlation trend. In addition, the analytical data from mouse disease models also showed similar results. It indicates that B10 cells may affect the production of TRAb by negative regulation of Th2 cells, while ILC2s can promote the production of autoantibodies such as TRAb by maintaining the dominant response state of Th2 cells. PMID: 31809586 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Autoimmunity - Category: Allergy & Immunology Tags: Autoimmunity Source Type: research