Little is known about the role of autophagy in the human humoral immune system. Here, we found that in B cells, genetic ablation of FIP200, a mammalian metabolic sensor that regulates autophagy in response to a range of stimuli, led to diminished humoral immune responses in mice. FIP200-deficient B cells displayed decreased differentiation into plasma cells, as well as mitochondrial dysfunction, alterations in heme biosynthesis, and significant cell death. Notably, the addition of heme was sufficient to rescue plasma cell differentiation of FIP200-deficient B cells. Thus, FIP200 determines B cell fates by controlling mitophagy and metabolic reprogramming.
Author(s):
Xu L, Bottermann M, Villavicencio PM, Warner J, Weldon SR, Xie Z, Filby A,
Liu X, Ganley IG, Ringel AE, Nair U, Batista FD
Liu X, Ganley IG, Ringel AE, Nair U, Batista FD
PubMed:
41405578
Citation:
Xu L, Bottermann M, Villavicencio PM, Warner J, Weldon SR, Xie Z, Filby A,
Liu X, Ganley IG, Ringel AE, Nair U, Batista FD
Xu L, Bottermann M, Villavicencio PM, Warner J, Weldon SR, Xie Z, Filby A,
Liu X, Ganley IG, Ringel AE, Nair U, Batista FD
J Exp Med
2026
Mar
223
doi:
10.1084/jem.20250535.
PMID: 41405578

