Injection Drug Use Alters Plasma Regulation of the B Cell Response
Sanghita Sarkar, Dave D. Hill, Alexander F. Rosenberg, Ellen F. Eaton, Olaf Kutsch, James J. Kobie

TL;DR
This study shows that injection drug use changes proteins in the blood, which affects how B cells respond, potentially increasing infection risk.
Contribution
The study reveals how injection drug use alters the plasma proteome and its regulation of B cell responses.
Findings
The plasma proteome of people who inject drugs (PWID) shows significant changes in immune-related proteins.
PWID plasma suppresses B cell proliferation and alters their transcriptional profiles toward germinal center B cell-like states.
Altered plasma proteins in PWID include complement components, immunoglobulins, and inflammatory mediators.
Abstract
The opioid epidemic continues to be a major public health issue that includes millions of people who inject drugs (PWID). PWID have increased incidence of serious infections, including HIV as well as metabolic and inflammatory sequelae. We sought to discern the extent of systemic alterations in humoral immunity associated with injection drug use, including alterations in the plasma proteome and its regulation of B cell responsiveness. Comprehensive plasma proteomics analysis of HIV negative/hepatitis C negative individuals with a history of recent injection heroin use was performed using mass spectrometry and ELISA. The effects of plasma from PWID and healthy controls on the in vitro proliferation and transcriptional profile of B cell responses to stimulation were determined by flow cytometry and RNA-Seq. The plasma proteome of PWID was distinct from healthy control individuals, with…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV Research and Treatment · Hepatitis C virus research · Diabetes and associated disorders
