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Class switching is differentially regulated in RBC alloimmunization and vaccination
Authors:Anupam Prakash  Jelena Medved  Abhinav Arneja  Conrad Niebuhr  Andria N. Li  Soraya Tarrah  Alexis R. Boscia  Emily D. Burnett  Aanika Singh  Juan E. Salazar  Wenhao Xu  Manjula Santhanakrishnan  Jeanne E. Hendrickson  Chance John Luckey
Affiliation:1. Department of Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA;2. Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Cancer Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA;3. Department of Laboratory Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Abstract:

Background

Studies of human patients have shown that most anti-RBC alloantibodies are IgG1 or IgG3 subclasses, although it is unclear why transfused RBCs preferentially drive these subclasses over others. Though mouse models allow for the mechanistic exploration of class-switching, previous studies of RBC alloimmunization in mice have focused more on the total IgG response than the relative distribution, abundance, or mechanism of IgG subclass generation. Given this major gap, we compared the IgG subclass distribution generated in response to transfused RBCs relative to protein in alum vaccination, and determined the role of STAT6 in their generation.

Study Design and Methods

WT mice were either immunized with Alum/HEL-OVA or transfused with HOD RBCs and levels of anti-HEL IgG subtypes were measured using end-point dilution ELISAs. To study the role of STAT6 in IgG class-switching, we first generated and validated novel STAT6 KO mice using CRISPR/cas9 gene editing. STAT6 KO mice were then transfused with HOD RBCs or immunized with Alum/HEL-OVA, and IgG subclasses were quantified by ELISA.

Results

When compared with antibody responses to Alum/HEL-OVA, transfusion of HOD RBCs induced lower levels of IgG1, IgG2b, and IgG2c but similar levels of IgG3. Class switching to most IgG subtypes remained largely unaffected in STAT6 deficient mice in response to HOD RBC transfusion, with the one exception being IgG2b. In contrast, STAT6 deficient mice showed altered levels of all IgG subtypes following Alum vaccination.

Discussion

Our results show that anti-RBC class-switching occurs via alternate mechanisms when compared with the well-studied immunogen alum vaccination.
Keywords:class switching  red blood cell alloimmunization  STAT6  vaccination
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