Abstract
Primary immune thrombocytopenia is an autoimmune disorder in which platelet destruction is a consequence of both B- and T-cell dysregulation. Flow cytometry was used to further characterize the B- and T-cell compartments in a cross-sectional cohort of 26 immune thrombocytopenia patients including antiplatelet antibody positive (n=14) and negative (n=12) patients exposed to a range of therapies, and a cohort of matched healthy volunteers. Markers for B-cell activating factor and its receptors, relevant B-cell activation markers (CD95 and CD21) and markers for CD4+ T-cell subsets, including circulating T-follicular helper-like cells, were included. Our results indicate that an expanded population of CD95+ naïve B cells correlated with disease activity in immune thrombocytopenia patients regardless of treatment status. A population of CD21-naïve B cells was specifically expanded in autoantibody-positive immune thrombocytopenia patients. Furthermore, the B-cell maturation antigen, a receptor for B-cell activating factor, was consistently and strongly up-regulated on plasmablasts from immune thrombocytopenia patients. These observations have parallels in other autoantibody-mediated diseases and suggest that loss of peripheral tolerance in naïve B cells may be an important component of immune thrombocytopenia pathogenesis. Moreover, the B-cell maturation antigen represents a potential target for plasma cell directed therapies in immune thrombocytopenia.Introduction
Primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is a clinical diagnosis given to patients with an unexplained, prolonged isolated thrombocytopenia. ITP is a rare but chronic condition in adults and is associated with significant bleeding-related morbidity and mortality.1 The condition is characterized by both platelet destruction and impaired platelet production. A role for platelet-directed antibodies was established in the 1960s with transfer experiments showing that thrombocytopenia could be induced by transfer of the gamma-globulin fraction of ITP patient serum.2 Using the most sensitive assays, antibodies binding platelet membrane glycoproteins are present in approximately 50% of patients.3 The mechanism by which B-cell tolerance is lost is a subject for debate, but an elevated serum level of B-cell Activating Factor (BAFF) is likely to be an important contributing factor.4 BAFF drives B-cell maturation, promotes B-cell survival and augments immunoglobulin production by binding three surface B-cell receptors: BAFF receptor (BAFF-R), transmembrane activator and calcium modulator and cyclophilin ligand interactor (TACI), and B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA).5 An expanded CD95 (Fas receptor) positive population of B cells has also been described in ITP and there are reports of fewer regulatory B cells, defined both as CD24CD38 B cells and by IL-10 production.76
A modern view of ITP pathogenesis places these B-cell abnormalities within a complex network of abnormalities affecting multiple immune cell lineages. T cells, in particular, contribute to platelet destruction both by facilitating the production of class-switched, high affinity autoantibody and through B-cell independent mechanisms such as cell-mediated cytotoxicity directed against platelets.8 The latter may be the primary mechanism of disease in a subset of patients with no detectable anti-platelet antibodies.9 High-affinity autoantibody production is facilitated by T follicular helper cells (TFH), a subset recently reported to be expanded proportional to germinal center and plasma cell numbers within the spleens of ITP patients.10
This study sought to extend existing knowledge of immune dysregulation in ITP by performing detailed flow cytometry-based immunophenotyping of the B- and T-cell compartments. An interest in the therapeutic potential of belimumab, an anti-BAFF humanized monoclonal antibody, led us to focus on BAFF and its receptors in B cells. While recent studies of immune populations in splenectomy specimens from patients with ITP have by their nature enrolled patients with refractory disease receiving significant immunodulatory therapy, we chose to enroll a cross-section of ITP patients in order to ensure the broadest possible applicability of our findings. Therefore, autoantibody-positive and -negative ITP patients were recruited across a range of platelet counts and prior treatments including rituximab and splenectomy, despite the known effects of these therapies on B cells with the intention of identifying candidate biomarkers of relevance to future clinical trials. An initial analysis was performed comparing splenectomy- and rituximab-naïve ITP patients with healthy volunteers, and significant results were evaluated in the larger cohort.
Methods
Patients and healthy volunteers
A cross-sectional cohort of adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of chronic ITP was recruited from patients in the UK ITP registry visiting the outpatient clinic of the Royal London Hospital Department of Haematology (Table 1 and Online Supplementary Table S1). All patients able to give informed consent were considered for inclusion; the only exclusion criterion was ongoing immunosuppressive or cytotoxic therapy for a non-ITP diagnosis (one renal transplant recipient). Recruitment was stratified to give approximately equal numbers of patients by anti-platelet antibody status. All participants provided one venous blood sample; a subset of patients provided a second sample at a later time point. None of the patients had received a platelet transfusion in the ten days prior to venesection or intravenous immunoglobulin in the 21 days prior to venesection.
Age-(within 10 years) and sex-matched healthy volunteers (HV) were recruited locally from within the GSK donor pool in parallel with the ITP patients. Ethical approval was obtained from the National Research Ethics Service, London, UK, REC, Ref. 07/H0718/57 (ITP patients) and National Research Ethics Service, Hertfordshire, UK, REC, Ref. 07/H0311/103 (GSK donor pool). The human biological samples were sourced ethically and their research use was in accordance with the terms of the informed consent procedures.
Anti-platelet autoantibodies
EDTA-anticoagulated venous blood was tested within three days of venesection. Direct tests (for platelet bound IgG and IgM) were determined using the platelet immunofluorescence test (PIFT)11 and by the monoclonal antibody-specific immobilization of platelet antigens (MAIPA) assay12 to determine whether there was platelet bound IgG localized to platelet glycoproteins (GP)IIb/IIIa, GPIa/IIa or GPIb/IX. A patient was considered to have platelet autoantibodies if the results of the direct PIFT or the direct MAIPA assay were greater than the mean +3 standard deviations of the values obtained for platelets obtained from at least 3 normal blood donors on the same day. These investigations were performed at the Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Laboratory, NHS Blood & Transplant, Filton. UK.
Flow cytometry
Venous blood was collected into lithium heparin tubes (Fisher Scientific) and arrived at the laboratory within three hours. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were prepared by density gradient centrifugation using Ficoll-Paque Plus (GE Healthcare). For transitional B cells, PBMC were pre-incubated with MitoTracker green (Invitrogen) at 10 nM concentration for 20 min at 37°C, then washed before adding antibodies.13 For B-cell immunophenotyping, a common antibody panel consisting of anti-CD38 (PE-Cy7, eBioscience 25-0389), anti-CD27 (APC, eBioscience 17-0279), anti-CD19 (APC-Cy7, BD Biosciences 557791), anti-IgD (biotin, BD Biosciences cat 555777), and anti-CD3 (Pac Orange, Invitrogen CD0330) was used, with the following antibodies added to individual tubes as required: anti-CD10 (PE, BD Bioscience 555375), anti-IgG (FITC, BD Biosciences 555786), anti-IgM (PerCP Cy5.5, BioLegend 314512), anti-CD95 (PE, BioLegend 305608), anti-CD21 (PE, BD Biosciences 555422), anti-CD24 (PerCP eFluor710, eBioscience 46-0247), anti-BCMA (PerCP eFluor710, custom GSK conjugate), anti-BAFFR (FITC, BioLegend 316904), and anti-TACI (PE, BioLegend 311906).
For T-cell immunophenotyping, a common skeleton consisting of anti-CD3 (APC-Cy7, BioLegend 300318), anti-CD4 (Pacific Blue, BioLegend 317429), anti-CD45RA (PerCP Cy5.5, eBioscience 45-0458), and anti-CXCR5 (PE, R&D Systems FAB190P) was supplemented with anti-CCR6 (PE-Cy7, BioLegend 353418), anti-PD1 (APC, BD Biosciences 558694), and anti-CXCR3 (FITC, R&D Systems FAB160F) for general T-cell subsets/T-follicular helper cells and with anti-CD25 (PE-Cy7, BD Biosciences 557741) and anti-CD127 (AF647, BD Biosciences 558598) for regulatory T cells. Normal rat serum and normal mouse serum was added to all tubes to minimize non-specific binding (Online Supplementary Table S2).
In each case, 1×10 cells were stained in 100 uL at room temperature in the dark for 20 min. Tubes containing anti-IgD were then stained with streptavidin eFluor 450 (eBiosciences 48-4317) for a further 20 min.
Cells were resuspended in 200 uL FACS buffer and acquired immediately on a BD Canto II (BD Biosciences). A compensation matrix was calculated using BD CompBeads for all stains except Mitotracker, where positive and negative live cells were used. Gating was performed in FlowJo vX (Miltenyi). B-cell gating is shown (Figure 1A). CD4 T cells are gated as CD4CD3 cells in the lymphocyte gate. Memory CD4 T cells are gated as CD45RA. Tregs are gated as a discrete CD25, CD127 population. For quality assurance, each ITP sample was run in parallel with an HV sample using the same antibody mixes; only technically adequate samples were included in the analysis.
BAFF enzyme linked immunosorbent assay
Serum was extracted from venous blood collected into serum tubes and centrifuged at 2000 rpm for 15 min. This was stored at −80°C until the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) could be performed, in three overlapping batches. The Quantikine Human BAFF/BLyS/TNFSF13B Immunoassay (R&D Systems, cat. n. DBLYS0) was used according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Statistical analysis
The main analysis was performed using a ‘patient-level’ cohort, comprising one sample per ITP patient and a matched HV sample, stratified by prior splenectomy or rituximab use. Where patients provided multiple samples, the time point with the lowest platelet count was chosen. Twenty-six ITP patients fulfilled these criteria for the B-cell analysis and 18 patients for the T-cell analysis, with HV matched to each analysis. Two patients had FACS data without a platelet count; these were only excluded from analyses requiring a platelet count. Four patients in the ITP cohort had platelet count and FACS data from multiple time points, allowing a repeated measures analysis.
All data analysis was performed using R (www.r-project.org). Between group comparisons were performed using pairwise Wilcoxon signed-rank tests, except for a repeated measures analysis of the association between platelet count and CD95 naïve B cells where a linear mixed effects model was implemented using the nlme package in R. An alpha level of 0.05 was considered significant.
Results
Major B-cell populations
A cross-sectional cohort of 26 ITP patients, 12 of whom had active disease (i.e. platelet count < 50×10/L) was matched to 26 HV (Table 1). Nine ITP patients were on no current treatment and had not received prior B-cell modulating therapies; 12 patients had previously received rituximab or a splenectomy, and a number were also receiving other agents including mycophenolate, azathioprine and romiplostim (Online Supplementary Table S2). Fourteen ITP patients had detectable platelet-bound IgG or IgM antibodies, and 7 of these had antibodies with the following specificities: GPIIb/IIIa (4), GPIb/IX (1) or both GPIIb/IIIa and GPIb/IX (2).
The major B-cell subsets [i.e. B cells overall, naïve (CD27IgD) B cells, CD27IgD memory B cells, CD27IgD memory B cells, ‘double-negative’ (CD27IgD) B cells and circulating plasmablasts gated as shown in Figure 1A) were compared between splenectomy- and rituximab-naïve (‘untreated’) ITP patients (n=14) and HV. No differences were observed in these headline populations between ITP patients and HV (Figure 1B). There were also no differences between untreated ITP patients and HV in the most immature population of peripheral blood B cells, transitional B cells, despite phenotyping these in detail (Figure 1C and D).
B-cell expression of CD95 (Fas receptor) and CD21 (Complement receptor 2)
There were, however, differences in the B-cell surface expression of CD95 and CD21, both linked previously to autoimmune disease.1514 Overall, CD95 was expressed in a bimodal fashion on the B-cell surface (Figure 2A) with the proportion of CD95 cells increasing stepwise along the B-cell differentiation pathway (i.e. median proportion in HV of CD95 naïve B cells = 1%, IgD CD27 memory B cells = 16%, IgG IgDCD27 memory B cells = 43% and circulating plasmablasts = 98%) (Figure 2B). In naïve and IgD CD27 memory B cells, there was a small but highly statistically significant expansion of the CD95 population in untreated ITP patients compared to HV (Figure 2B). ITP patients with prior splenectomy or rituximab also had a higher median proportion of CD95 IgD CD27 memory B cells than their untreated counterparts and a positive association was observed with time since rituximab therapy (Figure 2C and D), suggesting an additional effect of B-cell depletion. This is in contrast to the proportion of CD95 naïve B cells, which was increased similarly in all ITP patients regardless of prior rituximab and splenectomy exposure, and which was not associated with time post rituximab.
The size of the CD95 naïve population was correlated with disease activity, with the largest expansion observed in those patients with platelet counts less than 50×10/L (Figure 2E). Using the 4 ITP patients who had been bled at a second time point (range 56–455 days between samples), including one who had previously had a splenectomy and one who had received rituximab 2.6 years prior to the first blood draw, we found that within individual patients, an improving platelet count was associated with a reduction in the proportion of CD95 naïve B cells (P=0.05, repeated measures using a linear mixed effects model) (Figure 2F). Prior rituximab or splenectomy was also associated with an expansion of the proportion of CD95 cells compared to HV in IgD-CD27 memory B cells (data not shown).
CD21, on the other hand, was present in HV on a median 98% of naïve B cells, 87% of IgG IgD-CD27 memory B cells and 36% of plasmablasts, confirming other reports that this marker is lost stepwise during B-cell terminal differentiation (Figure 3A and B). There was a significant reduction in the proportion of naïve B cells expressing CD21 in untreated ITP patients compared with matched HV (Figure 3B). This was unrelated to disease activity (platelets < 50×10/L vs. platelets ≥ 50×10/L; P=0.79). Instead, this loss of CD21 on naïve B cells was restricted to patients with detectable platelet autoantibodies and appeared to be ameliorated by treatment with rituximab or splenectomy (Figure 3C). Median platelet counts were similar between antibody positive and negative patients (51.5×10/L vs. 56.5×10/L; P=0.93).
BAFF and its receptors
Serum BAFF levels were increased in our cohort of ITP patients overall, consistent with other studies. Moreover, in untreated patients, there was a trend toward higher serum BAFF levels in active disease (i.e. platelet count < 50×10/L) compared with patients in remission (Figure 4A). This trend was not seen in the treated group, most likely due to increases in serum BAFF in the setting of rituximab and splenectomy. This is well-described and a consequence of the effect of B-cell depletion on BAFF release and synthesis.16 There were no differences in serum BAFF levels according to autoantibody status (data not shown).
In the absence of published data on the expression of BAFF receptors following rituximab, we analyzed both treated and untreated ITP patients. BAFFR was detectable on all populations of B cells except for plasmablasts (Figure 4B). TACI was broadly expressed on memory B cells and plasmablasts but present on only a very small population of naïve B cells (Figure 4C). There were no significant differences in the B-cell expression of either of these markers between HV and untreated ITP patients, but we observed a significant decrease in BAFF receptor expression on a number of B-cell populations and increase in TACI expression on naïve B cells in samples from ITP patients after rituximab or splenectomy (Figure 4C). Neither of these showed a correlation with time since last rituximab dose (data not shown).
BCMA was primarily present on plasmablasts, but was also detected on a small number of double-negative (CD27-IgD-) B cells. BCMA was markedly and consistently up-regulated on plasmablasts in ITP (Figure 4D), irrespective of platelet count, prior treatment or autoantibody status (Figure 4D–F).
T-cell phenotype
Data on T-cell populations were also available for 18 ITP patients. We found a trend to proportionally fewer CD4 T cells in splenectomy- and rituximab-naïve ITP patients compared to HV, consistent with previous reports of a reduced CD4:CD8 ratio in ITP (Wilcoxon P-value = 0.053) (Figure 5A).17 We found few other differences within the memory T cell, CXCR5 memory T cell and Treg populations when these were analyzed as a proportion of their parent populations. Reduced numbers of CD4 T cells and memory CD4 T cells overall in our cohort of splenectomy- and rituximab-naïve ITP patients resulted in a number of differences in subpopulations in absolute terms (Figure 5B).
Discussion
Reduced CD21 and increased CD95 expression on naïve B cells and marked BCMA upregulation on plasmablasts are identified as important components of the immune phenotype of ITP. CD95 is up-regulated rapidly upon B-cell activation,18 and the ITP-specific expansion of CD95 and of CD21 naïve B cells observed in this study may represent a population of autoreactive B cells activated in the presence of circulating platelet autoantigens. It is known that self-reactive B cells emerge from the bone marrow in reasonable quantities,19 and that peripheral mechanisms of tolerance can be overcome in the presence of high BAFF levels.20
Mechanistic data in support of this hypothesis comes from a recent study of B cells from patients with flaring systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).21 Using B-cell receptor repertoire analysis by next generation sequencing, the authors demonstrated that a distinct subset of naïve B cells constituted an important source of autoreactive antibody secreting cells. This activated subset was characterized by increased CD95 expression and reduced expression of CD21. Although our flow panels were not designed to study the co-expression of these markers, these findings mirror the expanded CD95 and CD21 naïve B-cell populations we describe here. In SLE, this subset was expanded further during flaring disease, consistent with our observation that expansion of CD95 naïve B cells in ITP correlated with disease activity.
The loss of CD21, a receptor for C3d that interacts with CD19 to lower the threshold for signaling through the B-cell receptor,22 has been linked to a subset of naïve B cells in which autoreactive cells are over-represented. Expansion of this CD21 naïve B-cell population has been described in other immune-mediated conditions as well as ITP and SLE, including Sjogren’s syndrome, common variable immunodeficiency and rheumatoid arthritis.2523 It is of interest that, in our study, CD21 naïve B cells were found predominantly in antiplatelet antibody positive patients, regardless of platelet count. This would be consistent with the hypothesis that, even though the size of the CD95 CD21 naïve B-cell population was small, it plays an important role in the generation of autoantibody.
Given this hypothesis, it would have been informative to study the expression of CD95 and CD21 in a cohort with non-immune thrombocytopenia. This population was not available to this study, but is a potential avenue of future research. The lack of differences in the transitional B-cell compartment is in apparent contradiction to an earlier report of fewer CD24CD38 B cells in non-splenectomized patients with active ITP.6 However, the changes reported were subtle and only found in patients with a platelet count less than 50×10/L. Comparatively small numbers restricted our ability to perform detailed subanalyses, and as such, it is possible that our cross-sectional cohort was not powered to replicate this observation. Alternatively, this may be because we used the gating strategy of Palanichamy et al.13 to distinguish three populations of transitional B cells. The CD24CD38 population of the earlier report would represent the more immature T1–2 populations in our study. However, we were able to demonstrate a trend toward expansion of these early B-cell populations in patients post rituximab, consistent with a previous report.26
The dominant finding of our T-cell analysis was a CD4 T-cell lymphopenia, most prominent in the memory compartment. Such a lymphopenia has not been described previously in ITP and should be interpreted with caution. Lymphopenia is a recognized consequence of therapy and 4 of the 16 ITP patients analyzed were receiving antiproliferative agents (i.e. azathioprine, mycophenolate).27 The lack of observed differences in other subsets, especially Tregs, may reflect the cross-sectional nature of the patient cohort, which was recruited across a range of disease activity.
Finally, there was a strong upregulation of BCMA on plasmablasts in ITP. The role of BCMA in the pathogenesis of autoimmune disease is complex and incompletely understood. While the sole B-cell phenotype of BCMA mice appears to be impaired survival of long-lasting plasma cells,28 when crossed onto a lupus prone background, BCMA mice exhibited a range of pathologies, including increased plasma cell number, elevated systemic BAFF, and an increased titer of anti-nuclear antibody compared to their BCMA sufficient counterparts.29 Similarly, little is known about the regulation of BCMA transcription and membrane expression. Certainly Blimp-1 and IRF4 are important positive regulators,30 consistent with BCMAs predominant expression on plasma cells and plasmablasts; however, whether BCMA regulates, or is regulated by, its ligands BAFF and APRIL is unknown. Additional weight for a role for BCMA in autoimmune disease comes from studies in SLE, where B-cell expression of BCMA has been shown to be elevated.31 Current therapies, including rituximab, do not target plasma cells well. The restricted tissue expression pattern of BCMA, its important role in plasma cell survival, and its increased expression in ITP and other autoimmune diseases together make it an attractive target for novel plasma cell-directed therapies.
Our study adds significant detail to an emerging B-cell phenotype that is shared between a number of antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases. This phenotype is characterized by expanded populations of CD95 and CD21 naïve B cells, elevated levels of serum BAFF and elevated BCMA expression on plasmablasts. As well as ITP, aspects of this phenotype have also been observed in SLE, common variable immunodeficiency, and rheumatoid arthritis.3223 Individually, these autoimmune diseases are rare, but a common immune phenotype may streamline the development of effective therapies targeting multiple diseases. The CD95 population of naïve B cells in particular is identified as warranting further study as a potential biomarker for this phenotype, being both correlated with disease activity within and between individuals, and robust to commonly used B-cell modulating therapies.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank patients and healthy volunteers who have contributed samples for this study. We are grateful for the advice that Prof. Ken Smith, Iñaki Sanz and Chungwen Wei provided during the study design and to Andrea Itano, who initiated the program.
Footnotes
- Check the online version for the most updated information on this article, online supplements, and information on authorship & disclosures: www.haematologica.org/content/101/6/698
- FundingPrimary funding for this study was from GSK. SMF was funded by a Translational Medicine and Therapeutics PhD studentship jointly funded by the Wellcome Trust and GSK. The UK ITP Registry (www.ukitpregistry.com) is supported through unrestricted educational grants from GSK and Amgen. We thank the staff of the serology section of Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics Laboratory, NHS Blood & Transplant – Filton for performing the platelet antibody investigations.
- Received October 6, 2015.
- Accepted March 8, 2016.
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