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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Altered B cell activation contributes to the immunopathogenesis of childhood arthritis-associated uveitis.

Journal:
Nature communications
Year:
2026
Authors:
Jebson, Bethany R et al.
Affiliation:
Centre for Adolescent Rheumatology at UCL · United Kingdom
Species:
rodent

Abstract

In Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA), the most common childhood rheumatic disease, many patients also develop uveitis (JIA-uveitis), risking life-long vision loss. The mechanisms driving uveitis development in JIA remain understudied. Here, we demonstrate that peripheral blood CD19IgDCD27double negative type 1 (DN1) B cells are elevated in JIA-uveitis compared to JIA patients without eye disease (JIA). The B cell receptor (BCR) repertoire was also more clonal and somatically hypermutated in JIA-uveitis and antigen-activated B cells infiltrated chronically inflamed JIA-uveitis eyes. Features of heightened B cell activation were recapitulated in experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis (EAU) and disrupting B and T cell interactions using monoclonal antibodies and transgenic mice suppresses uveitis. Together, these findings support a conceptual shift that uveitis is a primarily T cell driven disease and provide evidence for potential new therapeutic strategies that also consider B cells as drivers in disease pathology.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41633998/