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Upregulated Selenoprotein I during LPS-induced B cell activation promotes lipidomic changes and is required for effective differentiation into IgM secreting plasma B cells.

The mechanisms driving metabolic reprogramming during B cell activation are unclear, particularly roles for enzymatic pathways involved in lipid remodeling. We found that murine B cell activation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) led to a 1.6-fold increase in total lipids that included higher levels of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and plasmenyl PE. Selenoprotein I (SELENOI) is an[62] ethanolamine phospholipid transferase involved in the synthesis of both PE and plasmenyl PE, and SELENOI expression was also upregulated during activation. Selenoi knockout (KO) B cells exhibited decreased levels of plasmenyl PE, which plays an important antioxidant role. Lipid peroxidation was measured and found to increase ∼2-fold in KO versus WT B cells. Cell death was not impacted by KO in LPS-treated B cells and proliferation was only slightly reduced, but differentiation into CD138 + Blimp-1+ plasma B cells was decreased ∼2-fold. This led to examination of B cell receptors important for differentiation that recognize the ligand B cell activating factor (BAFF), and levels of the transmembrane activator and calcium-modulator and cytophilin ligand interactor (TACI; CD267) were significantly decreased on KO B cells compared to WT controls. Vaccination with ovalbumin (OVA)/adjuvant led to decreased OVA-specific IgM levels in sera of KO mice compared to WT mice. Real-time PCR analyses revealed a decreased switch from surface to secreted IgM in spleens of KO mice induced by vaccination or LP-BM5 retrovirus infection. Overall, these findings detail the lipidomic response of B cells to LPS activation and reveal the importance of upregulated SELENOI for promoting differentiation into IgM secreting plasma B cells.

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