Background: Primary antibody deficiencies (PADs) are characterized by hypogammaglobulinemia and impaired B-cell differentiation. Patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) present severe reductions in at least 2 serum immunoglobulins and impaired terminal differentiation of B cells. Most patients with CVID do not appear to present monogenic defects. Activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase delta syndrome (APDS), caused by gain-of-function mutations in the PIK3CD gene (p110δ), can present in patients with a CVID-like phenotype. Memory B-cell differentiation requires the orchestrated activation of numerous intracellular signaling pathways, which promote transcriptional programs required for long-term B-cell survival. The aim of this study was to develop a flow cytometry assay to trace the PI3K-Akt-mTOR pathway, a critical component of B-cell homeostasis, and analyze its status in PADs.
Methods: We analyzed the intracellular expression of Akt and S6 by flow cytometry and their phosphorylation status in both baseline conditions and upon B-cell receptor activation with anti-IgM in various primary B-cell subsets of patients with CVID and APDS.
Results: B cells from CVID patients showed reduced phosphorylation in Akt and S6 proteins after anti-IgM stimulation. Constitutive high baseline B-cell levels of Akt and S6 phosphorylation in a patient with APDS were reduced once m-TOR inhibition therapy was initiated.
Conclusions: Intracellular flow cytometry can be routinely employed to explore alterations in the PI3K-Akt-mTOR pathway in B cells from patients with PADs. AKT and S6 phosphorylation levels are informative biomarkers that could be employed as mTOR inhibitors for monitoring therapies targeting this pathway.
Keywords: B cells; common variable immunodeficiency; flow cytometry; monitoring PI3K-Akt pathway; phosphorylation.
© 2020 International Clinical Cytometry Society.