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Enhanced protein synthesis is a defining requirement for neonatal B cell development

Åkerstrand, Hugo LU ; Boldrin, Elena LU ; Montano, Giorgia LU ; Vanhee, Stijn LU ; Olsson, Karin LU ; Krausse, Niklas LU ; Vergani, Stefano LU ; Ciesla, Maciej LU ; Bellodi, Cristian LU and Yuan, Joan LU orcid (2023) In Frontiers in Immunology
Abstract
The LIN28B RNA binding protein exhibits an ontogenically restricted expression pattern and is a key molecular regulator of fetal and neonatal B lymphopoiesis. It enhances the positive selection of CD5+ immature B cells early in life through amplifying the CD19/PI3K/c-MYC pathway and is sufficient to reinitiate self-reactive B-1a cell output when ectopically expressed in the adult. In this study, interactome analysis in primary B cell precursors showed direct binding by LIN28B to numerous ribosomal protein transcripts, consistent with a regulatory role in cellular protein synthesis. Induction of LIN28B expression in the adult setting is sufficient to promote enhanced protein synthesis during the small Pre-B and immature B cell stages, but... (More)
The LIN28B RNA binding protein exhibits an ontogenically restricted expression pattern and is a key molecular regulator of fetal and neonatal B lymphopoiesis. It enhances the positive selection of CD5+ immature B cells early in life through amplifying the CD19/PI3K/c-MYC pathway and is sufficient to reinitiate self-reactive B-1a cell output when ectopically expressed in the adult. In this study, interactome analysis in primary B cell precursors showed direct binding by LIN28B to numerous ribosomal protein transcripts, consistent with a regulatory role in cellular protein synthesis. Induction of LIN28B expression in the adult setting is sufficient to promote enhanced protein synthesis during the small Pre-B and immature B cell stages, but not during the Pro-B cell stage. This stage dependent effect was dictated by IL-7 mediated signaling, which masked the impact of LIN28B through an overpowering stimulation on the c-MYC/protein synthesis axis in Pro-B cells. Importantly, elevated protein synthesis was a distinguishing feature between neonatal and adult B cell development that was critically supported by endogenous Lin28b expression early in life. Finally, we used a ribosomal hypomorphic mouse model to demonstrate that subdued protein synthesis is specifically detrimental for neonatal B lymphopoiesis and the output of B-1a cells, without affecting B cell development in the adult. Taken together, we identify elevated protein synthesis as a defining requirement for early-life B cell development that critically depends on Lin28b. Our findings offer new mechanistic insights into the layered formation of the complex adult B cell repertoire. (Less)
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Contribution to journal
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published
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Frontiers in Immunology
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85159548016
  • pmid:37138883
ISSN
1664-3224
DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2023.1130930
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
71216041-3458-485d-b744-30dcfbdbcf1e
date added to LUP
2023-05-26 15:16:59
date last changed
2024-04-05 19:58:35
@article{71216041-3458-485d-b744-30dcfbdbcf1e,
  abstract     = {{The LIN28B RNA binding protein exhibits an ontogenically restricted expression pattern and is a key molecular regulator of fetal and neonatal B lymphopoiesis. It enhances the positive selection of CD5+ immature B cells early in life through amplifying the CD19/PI3K/c-MYC pathway and is sufficient to reinitiate self-reactive B-1a cell output when ectopically expressed in the adult. In this study, interactome analysis in primary B cell precursors showed direct binding by LIN28B to numerous ribosomal protein transcripts, consistent with a regulatory role in cellular protein synthesis. Induction of LIN28B expression in the adult setting is sufficient to promote enhanced protein synthesis during the small Pre-B and immature B cell stages, but not during the Pro-B cell stage. This stage dependent effect was dictated by IL-7 mediated signaling, which masked the impact of LIN28B through an overpowering stimulation on the c-MYC/protein synthesis axis in Pro-B cells. Importantly, elevated protein synthesis was a distinguishing feature between neonatal and adult B cell development that was critically supported by endogenous Lin28b expression early in life. Finally, we used a ribosomal hypomorphic mouse model to demonstrate that subdued protein synthesis is specifically detrimental for neonatal B lymphopoiesis and the output of B-1a cells, without affecting B cell development in the adult. Taken together, we identify elevated protein synthesis as a defining requirement for early-life B cell development that critically depends on Lin28b. Our findings offer new mechanistic insights into the layered formation of the complex adult B cell repertoire.}},
  author       = {{Åkerstrand, Hugo and Boldrin, Elena and Montano, Giorgia and Vanhee, Stijn and Olsson, Karin and Krausse, Niklas and Vergani, Stefano and Ciesla, Maciej and Bellodi, Cristian and Yuan, Joan}},
  issn         = {{1664-3224}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Immunology}},
  title        = {{Enhanced protein synthesis is a defining requirement for neonatal B cell development}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1130930}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fimmu.2023.1130930}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}