- Pröbstel, Anne-Katrin;
- Zhou, Xiaoyuan;
- Baumann, Ryan;
- Wischnewski, Sven;
- Kutza, Michael;
- Rojas, Olga L;
- Sellrie, Katrin;
- Bischof, Antje;
- Kim, Kicheol;
- Ramesh, Akshaya;
- Dandekar, Ravi;
- Greenfield, Ariele L;
- Schubert, Ryan D;
- Bisanz, Jordan E;
- Vistnes, Stephanie;
- Khaleghi, Khashayar;
- Landefeld, James;
- Kirkish, Gina;
- Liesche-Starnecker, Friederike;
- Ramaglia, Valeria;
- Singh, Sneha;
- Tran, Edwina B;
- Barba, Patrick;
- Zorn, Kelsey;
- Oechtering, Johanna;
- Forsberg, Karin;
- Shiow, Lawrence R;
- Henry, Roland G;
- Graves, Jennifer;
- Cree, Bruce AC;
- Hauser, Stephen L;
- Kuhle, Jens;
- Gelfand, Jeffrey M;
- Andersen, Peter M;
- Schlegel, Jürgen;
- Turnbaugh, Peter J;
- Seeberger, Peter H;
- Gommerman, Jennifer L;
- Wilson, Michael R;
- Schirmer, Lucas;
- Baranzini, Sergio E
Changes in gut microbiota composition and a diverse role of B cells have recently been implicated in multiple sclerosis (MS), a central nervous system (CNS) autoimmune disease. Immunoglobulin A (IgA) is a key regulator at the mucosal interface. However, whether gut microbiota shape IgA responses and what role IgA+ cells have in neuroinflammation are unknown. Here, we identify IgA-bound taxa in MS and show that IgA-producing cells specific for MS-associated taxa traffic to the inflamed CNS, resulting in a strong, compartmentalized IgA enrichment in active MS and other neuroinflammatory diseases. Unlike previously characterized polyreactive anti-commensal IgA responses, CNS IgA cross-reacts with surface structures on specific bacterial strains but not with brain tissue. These findings establish gut microbiota-specific IgA+ cells as a systemic mediator in MS and suggest a critical role of mucosal B cells during active neuroinflammation with broad implications for IgA as an informative biomarker and IgA-producing cells as an immune subset to harness for therapeutic interventions.