The Role of Pax5 (BSAP) in Early and Late B-Cell Development

2003 ◽  
pp. 217-228
Author(s):  
Markus Horcher ◽  
Dirk Eberhard ◽  
Meinrad Busslinger
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nandor Nagy ◽  
Florian Busalt ◽  
Viktoria Halasy ◽  
Marina Kohn ◽  
Stefan Schmieder ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (9) ◽  
pp. 2047-2051 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simona Ferrari ◽  
Vassilios Lougaris ◽  
Stefano Caraffi ◽  
Roberta Zuntini ◽  
Jianying Yang ◽  
...  

Agammaglobulinemia is a rare primary immunodeficiency characterized by an early block of B cell development in the bone marrow, resulting in the absence of peripheral B cells and low/absent immunoglobulin serum levels. So far, mutations in Btk, μ heavy chain, surrogate light chain, Igα, and B cell linker have been found in 85–90% of patients with agammaglobulinemia. We report on the first patient with agammaglobulinemia caused by a homozygous nonsense mutation in Igβ, which is a transmembrane protein that associates with Igα as part of the preBCR complex. Transfection experiments using Drosophila melanogaster S2 Schneider cells showed that the mutant Igβ is no longer able to associate with Igα, and that assembly of the BCR complex on the cell surface is abrogated. The essential role of Igβ for human B cell development was further demonstrated by immunofluorescence analysis of the patient's bone marrow, which showed a complete block of B cell development at the pro-B to preB transition. These results indicate that mutations in Igβ can cause agammaglobulinemia in man.


1998 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 383
Author(s):  
S. R. Rheingold ◽  
M. Jiang ◽  
S. A. Grupp ◽  
B. Himelstein

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1788-1788
Author(s):  
Nagisa Sakurai ◽  
Manami Maeda ◽  
Sung-UK Lee ◽  
Julie Teruya-Feldstein ◽  
Takahiro Maeda

Abstract LRF (Leukemia/Lymphoma Related Factor, also known as Pokemon, FBI-1, OCZF and ZBTB7a) was originally identified as an interaction partner of the oncoprotein BCL6. LRF can act as a proto-oncogene by repressing the tumor suppressor ARF and cooperates with BCL6 in MEF (mouse embryonic fibroblasts) immortalization. It is highly expressed in human Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) cases, in the pathogenesis of which BCL6 is known to be involved (Maeda et al. Nature 2005). Inducible inactivation of the LRF gene in mouse Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSCs) results in complete block of early B cell development at the HSC/progenitor stages and concomitant development of double positive (DP) T cells in the bone marrow (BM) (Maeda et al. Science 2007). While these findings clearly illustrate key roles of LRF in normal and malignant B cell development, it is not fully identified as to which B cell stages LRF is required during normal B cell development. To elucidate the role of LRF in B cells in vivo, we established and characterized B cell-specific LRF conditional knockout (KO) mice. We took advantage of mb-1 Cre knock-in mice, in which Cre expression is restricted to the B cells after the ProB cell stage. B cell compartments in the BM (PreProB, ProB, PreB and immatureB) are grossly normal in LRFF/ Fmb1-Cre mice. The LRF gene was efficiently eliminated in BM CD19+ B cells revealed by quantitative real-time PCR assay. Furthermore, LRF protein was not detected in purified CD19+ B cells, but seen in CD19-non-B cells, confirming the specific inactivation of the LRF gene in B cells. Thus, despite its critical role at the HSC/progenitor stages, LRF was found to be dispensable for the survival of normal BM B cells. These findings are consistent with the fact that GSI treatment (Maeda et al. Science 2007) or Notch1 loss (Lee and Maeda, unpublished) rescues the defects in early B cell development seen in LRFF/FMx1-Cre+ mice. Notch signaling is necessary for the transitional B cells to commit to the marginal zone B cells (MZB). Inactivation of the component of the Notch pathways in mice results in no MZB development. On the contrary, deletion of the MINT/SHARP gene, a suppressor of Notch signaling, leads to increase of MZB cells and concomitant reduction of follicular B (FOB) cells, indicating that Notch induces MZB cell fate at the transitional B cell stage. Given that LRF is a potent Notch suppressor at the HSC/progenitor stages, we hypothesized that LRF opposes Notch pathway in mature B cells as well. To test this hypothesis, we characterized mature B cell development in LRFF/Fmb1-Cre mice. While transitional B cells were largely unaffected in LRFF/Fmb1-Cre mice, we observed a slight but statistically significant reduction of follicular (FO) B cells (B220+CD19+AA4.1-CD1d-CD23+) and concomitant increase of MZB cells (B220+CD19+AA4.1-CD1d+CD23-) as seen in MINT/SHARP knockout mice. Thus, LRF may also oppose Notch pathways at the branching point for the FOB vs. MZB fate decision. Finally, to determine the role of LRF in Germinal Center (GC) formation in vivo, we characterized secondary lymphoid organs of LRFF/Fmb1-Cre mice after antigen stimulation. Both spleen and Peyer’s Patches were analyzed two weeks after immunization with Chicken Gamma Globulin (NP-CGG). While a GC reaction was robustly induced in control mice upon immunization, GC formation was significantly impaired in LRFF/Fmb1-Cre mice as revealed by immuno-histochemical analysis (IHC) and FACS. Only few GC cells (B220+CD19+FAS+CD38-PNA+) were observed in spleens, and the absolute numbers of GC cells were drastically reduced in LRFF/Fmb1-Cre mice. Residual LRF-deficient GC B cells were mostly negative for CXCR4, which is predominantly expressed in proliferating centroblasts within GCs, suggesting that LRF-deficient GC B cells may have defects in cellular proliferation in response to antigen stimuli. Our data indicates that LRF plays key roles in mature B cell development in the secondary lymphoid organs, but dispensable for the maintenance of early BM B cells.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1466-1466
Author(s):  
Christopher D Chien ◽  
Elizabeth D Hicks ◽  
Paul P Su ◽  
Haiying Qin ◽  
Terry J Fry

Abstract Abstract 1466 Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood malignancy. Although cure rates for this disease are approximately 90%, ALL remains one of the leading causes cancer-related deaths in children. Thus, new treatments are needed for those patients that do not respond to or recur following standard chemotherapy. Understanding the mechanisms underlying resistance of pediatric ALL to therapy offers one approach to improving outcomes. Recent studies have demonstrated the importance of communication between cancer cells and their microenvironment and how this contributes to the progression and therapeutic resistance but this has not been well studied in the context of ALL. Since the bone marrow is presumed to be the site of initiation of B precursor ALL we set out in our study to determine how ALL cells utilize the bone marrow milieu in a syngeneic transplantable model of preB cell ALL in immunocompetent mice. In this model, intravenously injected preB ALL develops first in the bone marrow, followed by infiltration into the spleen, lymph node, and liver. Using flow cytometry to detect the CD45.2 isoform following injection into B6CD45.1+ congenic recipients, leukemic cells can be identified in the bone marrow as early as 5 days after IV injection with a sensitivity of 0.01%-0.1%. The pre-B ALL line is B220+/CD19+/CD43+/BP1+/IL-7Ralpha (CD127)+/CD25-/Surface IgM-/cytoplasmic IgM+ consistent with a pre-pro B cell phenotype. We find that increasing amounts of leukemic infiltration in the bone marrow leads to an accumulation of non-malignant developing B cells at stages immediately prior to the pre-pro B cell (CD43+BP1-CD25-) and a reduction in non-malignant developing pre B cells at the developmental stage just after to the pre-pro B cell stage (CD43+BP1+CD25+). These data potentially suggest occupancy of normal B cell developmental niches by leukemia resulting in block in normal B cell development. Further supporting this hypothesis, we find significant reduction in early progression of ALL in aged (10–12 month old) mice known to have a deficiency in B cell developmental niches. We next explored whether specific factors that support normal B cell development can contribute to progression of precursor B cell leukemia. The normal B cell niche has only recently been characterized and the specific contribution of this niche to early ALL progression has not been extensively studied. Using a candidate approach, we examined the role of specific cytokines such as Interleukin-7 (IL-7) and thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) in early ALL progression. Our preB ALL line expresses high levels of IL-7Ralpha and low but detectable levels of TLSPR. In the presence of IL-7 (0.1 ng/ml) and TSLP (50 ng/ml) phosphSTAT5 is detectable indicating that these receptors are functional but that supraphysiologic levels of TSLP are required. Consistent with the importance of IL-7 in leukemia progression, preliminary data demonstrates reduced lethality of pr-B cell ALL in IL-7 deficient mice. Overexpression of TSLP receptor (TSLPR) has been associated with high rates of relapse and poor overall survival in precursor B cell ALL. We are currently generating a TSLPR overepressing preBALL line to determine the effect on early ALL progression and are using GFP-expressing preB ALL cells to identify the initial location of preB ALL occupancy in the bone marrow. In conclusion, or model of early ALL progression provides insight into the role of the bone marrow microenvironment in early ALL progression and provides an opportunity to examine how these microenvironmental factors contribute to therapeutic resistance. Given recent advances in immunotherapy for hematologic malignancies, the ability to study this in an immunocompetent host will be critical. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 783-783
Author(s):  
Chuanxin Huang ◽  
Ann Haberman ◽  
Ari M. Melnick

Abstract The transcriptional repressor Bcl6 is a master regulator of the germinal center (GC) reaction through directing naïve B cells and CD4+ T cells to differentiate into GC B cells and follicular T helper (TFH) cells respectively. Bcl6 mediates its action largely by recruitment of co-repressors through its N-terminal BTB domain and its middle second repression domain (RD2). The BTB domain repression function is critical for GC B cell survival and proliferation, but not important for TFH cell differentiation. However, the in vivobiological function of RD2 remains unknown. To explore the specific role of RD2 transcriptional repression in the GC reaction, we generated a knockin mouse model in which the endogenous Bcl6 locus encodes a mutant form of the protein that specifically disrupts RD2 mediated transcriptional repression. RD2 mutant mice were developmentally indistinguishable from wild-type mice and displayed normal B cell development prior to the GC phase. However, these mice failed to accumulate GCs after immunization with sheep blood cells and exhibited remarkably impaired production of high-affinity antibodies 21 days after T-cell dependent antigen immunization, indicative of severe deficiency of the GC reaction. Mixed bone marrow transplantation experiments showed that RD2 loss of function led to complete loss of GC B cells and partial impairment of TFH cell differentiation in cell-intrinsic manner. Intravital imaging analysis indicated that RD2-deficent antigen-engaged B cells migrate normally to the inter-follicular zone of lymph nodes and interacted normally with cognate T helper cells. To further understand the nature of the functional defect of RD2 mutant B-cells, hen egg lysosome (HEL)-specific RD2-deficient GFP B cells and wild type RFP B cells (with the ratio 1:1) were transferred together with non-fluorescent ovalbumin (OVA)-specific T cells into SMARTA hosts, which were then immunized at the footpad with HEL-OVA two days later. On day 5 after immunization, draining popliteal lymph nodes were harvested and subjected for immunofluorescence histology analysis. At this time point, wild-type RFP B cells have started to cluster into tiny GC, whereas RD2-deficient GFP B cells did not form GCs. Moreover, wild-type B cells in the follicular interior were predominantly Bcl6hi, a characteristic of pre-GC B cells, suggesting that they could serve as a source of GC B cells. By contrast, RD2-deficient GFP B cells were primarily extra-follicular, and infrequently observed in the follicle interior. Most importantly, these cells were typically Bcl6lo, demonstrating that RD2 repression function is essential for pre-GC B cell differentiation. BCL6 knockout mice display a lethal inflammatory phenotype due to aberrant T-cell and macrophage activation. In striking contrast, RD2-deficient mice experienced normal healthy lives with no inflammation, and had nearly normal inflammation cytokine production in B cells and macrophages as well as differentiation of Th1,Th2 and Th17 subtypes. Hence the RD2 repression domain is specifically involved in humoral immunity but has minimal participation in the anti-inflammatory functions of BCL6. Instead we observed that the BCL6 zing finger domain plays the key role in anti-inflammatory functions in macrophages, and through ChIP-competition assays show that this is mediated by directly competing with STATs for binding to chemokine genes. These results highlight an essential role of RD2-mediated transcriptional repression in pre-GC B cell development specifically at the early B-cell activation phase. This is different than mice with BCL6 BTB mutations where early activation is normal and the defect occurs later on in the proliferative phase of GCs. The data suggest a surprising development and cellular context-specific biochemical functions of Bcl6 governing each distinct phase of the humoral immune response and inflammation. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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