scholarly journals INDUCTION OF B CELL TOLERANCE IN VITRO TO 2,4-DINITROPHENYL COUPLED TO A COPOLYMER OF D-GLUTAMIC ACID AND D-LYSINE (DNP-D-GL)

1973 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
pp. 312-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. V. Nossal ◽  
Beverley L. Pike ◽  
David H. Katz

Spleen cells from CBA or congenitally athymic ("nude") mice were pretreated with various concentrations of DNP coupled to a copolymer of D-glutamic acid and D-lysine (DNP37-D-GL), under various conditions of time and temperature. After washing, they were then cultured for 3 days with the direct B cell immunogen, DNP coupled to Salmonella adelaide flagella (DNP-FLA). Under all circumstances tried, exposure of cells to 1 µg/ml DNP-D-GL caused a 70–100% depression in the subsequent DNP-specific PFC response, and 100 ng/ml caused a lesser but still substantial effect. At the concentrations used, DNP-D-GL did not affect irrelevant antibody responses. Though cells from nude mice responded somewhat less well to DNP-FLA than those from CBA mice, no significant difference in the reaction of the two populations to the tolerogen was noted. This demonstrates that DNP-D-GL can, as previously suspected, directly cause unresponsiveness in B lymphocytes.

1982 ◽  
Vol 155 (3) ◽  
pp. 903-913 ◽  
Author(s):  
H H Wortis ◽  
L Burkly ◽  
D Hughes ◽  
S Roschelle ◽  
G Waneck

Mice were bred that simultaneously expressed the mutations nude and x-linked immune deficiency (xid). These doubly deficient animals had less than 10% of normal serum immunoglobulin levels. Their spleen cells did not respond to thymus-independent antigens in vitro nor did they respond to lipopolysaccharide. There was a virtual absence of cells with surface mu, kappa, or lambda 1, as detected by fluorescence. Sections of lymphoid organs revealed an absence of primary B cell follicles. Taken together, these results indicate a lack of mature B cells in nude xid mice. The possibility is considered that mature B cells belong to two subpopulations representing two lineages, one controlled by alleles at the xid locus and the other by alleles at the nude locus.


1976 ◽  
Vol 143 (6) ◽  
pp. 1429-1438 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Möller ◽  
E Gronowicz ◽  
U Persson ◽  
A Coutinho ◽  
E Möller ◽  
...  

Immunological tolerance was induced in adult mice by the injection of 5 mg of deaggregated hapten-protein conjugate. The tolerant state was confirmed 4-19 days later by the failure of such animals to mount an immune response against an aggregated form of the same thymus-dependent hapten-protein conjugate as well as by the inability of spleen cells from tolerant animals to respond to a thymus-independent hapten-carrier conjugate. Even though the animals were fully tolerant, their spleen cells were activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in vitro to produce normal numbers of plaque-forming cells against the hapten. The finding that spleen cells from tolerant animals could be activated by LPS into synthesis of antibodies against the tolerogen indicates that tolerance to thymus-dependent antigens does not affect B cells, but presumably only T cells. It is suggested that the only stringent test for the existence of B-cell tolerance is the inability of polyclonal B-cell activators to activate antibody synthesis against the tolerogen. The findings make it unlikely that B-cell tolerance to autologous thymus-dependent antigens exists and further indicate that such antigens cannot deliver activating or tolerogenic signals to B cells, although they are competent to combine with and block the Ig receptors.


1981 ◽  
Vol 154 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
CM Sorensen ◽  
CW Pierce

C57BL/10 mice were injected with semiallogeneic (B10.D2 X C57BL/10)F(1) spleen cells via the anterior facial vein within 24 h of birth to induce tolerance to B10.D2 (H-2(d)) alloantigens. Spleen cells from these mice as adults developed reduced, but significant, mixed lymphocyte and cytotoxic lymphocyte responses in vitro to H-2(d) stimulator cells and these treated mice rejected first-set B10.D2 skin grafts within a normal time-course, indicating that at best only a state of partial tolerance had been induced. Spleen cells from these mice failed to develop antibody responses to a variety of antigens in vitro when H-2(d) macrophages were in the cultures. Partially purified T cells from these neonatally treated mice suppressed primary antibody responses by normal syngeneic spleen cells in the presence of H-2(d) but not other allogeneic macrophages. These radiosensitive, haplotype-specific suppressor T (Ts) cells inhibited primary antibody responses by blocking initiation of the response, but failed to suppress secondary antibody responses and mixed lymphocyte or cytotoxic lymphocyte responses by appropriate responding spleen cells. To activate H-2(d) haplotype-specific Ts cells, stimulation with IA(d) subregion antigen(s) was necessary and sufficient; syngenicity at the I-A subregion of H-2 between the activated Ts cells and target responding spleen cell populations was also necessary and sufficient to achieve suppression. Comparable results have been obtained with spleen cells from BALB/c mice injected as neonates with (B10.D2 × C57BL/10)F(1) spleen cells where IA(b) antigens activate the haplotype-specific Ts cells. Implications for the significance of this population of haplotype-specific Ts cells in immune regulation are discussed and the properties of these Ts cells are compared and contrasted with other antigen-specific and nonspecific Ts cells whose activity is restricted by I- region products.


2000 ◽  
Vol 191 (5) ◽  
pp. 883-890 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keli L. Hippen ◽  
Lina E. Tze ◽  
Timothy W. Behrens

Clonal anergy of autoreactive B cells is a key mechanism regulating tolerance. Here, we show that anergic B cells express significant surface levels of CD5, a molecule normally found on T cells and a subset of B-1 cells. Breeding of the hen egg lysozyme (HEL) transgenic model for B cell anergy onto the CD5 null background resulted in a spontaneous loss of B cell tolerance in vivo. Evidence for this included elevated levels of anti-HEL immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies in the serum of CD5−/− mice transgenic for both an HEL-specific B cell receptor (BCR) and soluble lysozyme. “Anergic” B cells lacking CD5 also showed enhanced proliferative responses in vitro and elevated intracellular Ca2+ levels at rest and after IgM cross-linking. These data support the hypothesis that CD5 negatively regulates Ig receptor signaling in anergic B cells and functions to inhibit autoimmune B cell responses.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (22) ◽  
pp. 12525-12534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Woods ◽  
Fanny Monneaux ◽  
Pauline Soulas-Sprauel ◽  
Sylviane Muller ◽  
Thierry Martin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The link between infection and autoimmunity is not yet well understood. This study was designed to evaluate if an acute viral infection known to induce type I interferon production, like influenza, can by itself be responsible for the breakdown of immune tolerance and for autoimmunity. We first tested the effects of influenza virus on B cells in vitro. We then infected different transgenic mice expressing human rheumatoid factors (RF) in the absence or in the constitutive presence of the autoantigen (human immunoglobulin G [IgG]) and young lupus-prone mice [(NZB × NZW)F1] with influenza virus and looked for B-cell activation. In vitro, the virus induces B-cell activation through type I interferon production by non-B cells but does not directly stimulate purified B cells. In vivo, both RF and non-RF B cells were activated in an autoantigen-independent manner. This activation was abortive since IgM and IgM-RF production levels were not increased in infected mice compared to uninfected controls, whether or not anti-influenza virus human IgG was detected and even after viral rechallenge. As in RF transgenic mice, acute viral infection of (NZB × NZW)F1 mice induced only an abortive activation of B cells and no increase in autoantibody production compared to uninfected animals. Taken together, these experiments show that virus-induced acute type I interferon production is not able by itself to break down B-cell tolerance in both normal and autoimmune genetic backgrounds.


1976 ◽  
Vol 143 (6) ◽  
pp. 1327-1340 ◽  
Author(s):  
E S Metcalf ◽  
N R Klinman

The susceptibility of neonatal and adult B lymphocytes to tolerance induction was analyzed by a modification of the in vitro splenic focus technique. This technique permits stimulation of individual hapten-specific clonal precursor cells from both neonatal and adult donors. Neonatal or adult BALB/c spleen cells were adoptively transferred into irradiated, syngeneic, adult recipients which had been carrier-primed to hemocyanin (Hy), thus maximizing stimulation to the hapten 2,4-dinitrophenyl coupled by Hy (DNP-Hy). Cultures were initially treated with DNP on several heterologous (non-Hy) carriers and subsequently stimulated with DNP-Hy. Whereas the responsiveness of adult B cells was not diminished by pretreatment with any DNP conjugate, the majority of the neonatal B-cell response was abolished by in vitro culture with all of the DNP-protein conjugates. During the 1st wk of life, the ability to tolerize neonatal splenic B cells progressively decreased. Thus, tolerance in this system is: (a) restricted to B cells early in development; (b) established by both tolerogens and immunogens; (c) achieved at low (10(-9) M determinant) antigen concentrations; and (d) highly specific, discriminating between DNP- and TNP-specific B cells. We conclude that: (a) B lymphocytes, during their development, mature through a stage in which they are extremely susceptible to tolerogenesis; (b) the specific interaction of B-cell antigen receptors with multivalent antigens, while irrelevant to mature B cells, is tolerogenic to neonatal (immature) B cells unless antigen is concomitantly recognized by primed T cells; and (c) differences in the susceptibility of immature and mature B lymphocytes to tolerance induction suggest intrinsic differences between neonatal and adult B cells and may provide a physiologically relevant model for the study of tolerance to self-antigens.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2617-2617
Author(s):  
Heiko Trautmann ◽  
Daniel T. Starczynowski ◽  
Christiane Pott ◽  
Lana Harder ◽  
Norbert Arnold ◽  
...  

Abstract REL/NF-κB transcription factors are implicated in the control of apoptosis and cell growth particular in hematopoetic lineages. The REL locus at chromosomal region 2p13–16 is frequently amplified in B-cell lymphomas including diffuse-large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and may play a role in lymphomagenesis. Overexpression of wild-type REL can transform chicken lymphoid cells in culture, and several experimentally-generated mutations within the REL C-terminal transactivation domain (TAD) have been previously shown to enhance REL’s transforming ability. We analysed 83 B-cell lymphomas included in the ‘Deutsche Krebshilfe’ funded network „Molecular Mechanisms in Malignant Lymphoma“ for the presence of activating mutations in the coding region of REL. We performed a systematic dHPLC screening for mutation discovery and identified an identical point mutation in two human B-cell lymphomas (a t(14;18)-positive follicular lymphoma and a mediastinal B-cell lymphoma) that changes Ser525 to Pro within the REL TAD. In the mediastinal B-cell lymphoma, the mutation in REL was proven to be of germline origin. FISH showed an amplification of the REL locus in the tumor cells of this case. Quantitative allelic discrimination of S525P indicates that the mutant REL gene was over-represented in both cases. By in vitro experiments we could show that the S525P mutation enhances the in vitro transforming ability of REL in chicken spleen cells. In addition, REL-S525P differs from wild-type REL in its ability to activate certain κB site-containing reporter plasmids in transient transfection assays. In particular, REL-S525P has a reduced ability to activate the human manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) promoter in A293 cells; however, the MnSOD protein is over-expressed in REL-S525P-transformed chicken spleen cells as compared to wild-type REL-transformed cells. Ser525 of REL falls within a sequence that is similar to other known phosphorylation sites of the IκB kinase, and REL-S525P shows a reduced ability to be phosphorylated by IKKα in vitro. The S525P mutation reduces IKKα- and TNFα-stimulated transactivation by REL, as measured in GAL4 reporter assays. Furthermore, REL-S525P-transformed chicken spleen cells are more resistant to TNFα-induced cell death than cells transformed by wild-type REL. These results represent the first identification of a tumor-derived activating mutation in the REL proto-oncogene, and they suggest that the S525P mutation contributes to the development of human B-cell lymphomas by altering REL’s ability to induce target gene expression by affecting an IKKα-regulated transactivation activity.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 2396-2396
Author(s):  
Yongwei Zheng ◽  
Alexander W Wang ◽  
Mei Yu ◽  
Anand Padmanabhan ◽  
Benjamin E Tourdot ◽  
...  

Abstract Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an immune-mediated disorder that can cause fatal arterial or venous thrombosis/thromboembolism. Immune complexes consisting of heparin, platelet factor 4 (PF4) and PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies are central to the pathogenesis of HIT. However, heparin, a glycosoaminoglycan, and PF4 are normal body constituents and it is as yet unclear what triggers the initial induction of pathogenic antibodies. Here we described detection of B cells among peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from each of 9 healthy adults that produced PF4/heparin-specific IgM antibodies following in vitro stimulation with ubiquitous pro-inflammatory molecules containing unmethylated CpG dinucleotides derived from bacterial and viral DNA. PF4/heparin-specific IgM-generating B cells were present at a frequency of at least 0.03 to 1 per thousand B cells present in the PBMC population. Similarly, splenic B cells isolated from unmanipulated wild-type mice consistently produced PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies following in vitro stimulation with CpG. In addition, wild-type mice produced PF4/heparin-reactive antibodies upon in vivo challenge with CpG whereas unchallenged wild-type mice did not. These findings demonstrate that both humans and mice possess pre-existing, inactive and tolerant PF4/heparin-specific B cells. We suggest that tolerance can be broken by a strong inflammatory stimulus, leading to activation of these B cells and production of antibodies that recognize PF4/heparin in vitro and in vivo. Consistent with this concept, mice lacking protein kinase Cd (PKCd), a signaling molecule of the B-cell survival factor BAFF (B-cell activation factor), that are known to have breakdown of B-cell tolerance to self-antigens, spontaneously produced anti-PF4/heparin antibodies in the absence of an inflammatory stimulus. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that breakdown of tolerance can lead to PF4/heparin-specific antibody production and that B-cell tolerance plays an important role in HIT pathogenesis. Disclosures: White II: Bayer: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; CSL-Behring: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; NIH: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Asklepios: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Wyeth: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Entegrion: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Biogen: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Baxter: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees.


1975 ◽  
Vol 141 (5) ◽  
pp. 962-973 ◽  
Author(s):  
J W Schrader

B-cell tolerance has been induced by oligovalent thymus-dependent antigens in an entirely in vitro system. Dissociated spleen cells from congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice were preincubated for 24 h with 0.1 -- 1 mg/ml of either fowl gamma globulin (FGG) of DNP-human gamma globulin (DNP-HGG). After washing, the cells were tested for the ability to mount in vitro, thymus-independent responses against FGG and DNP. A state of specific responsiveness to either FGG or DNP was thus demonstrated. Features of this wholly in vitro system that paralleled previous findings on the in vivo induction of B-cell tolerance in nu/nu mice were the kinetics, 24 h being required for tolerance induction in either case, the abrogation of tolerance induction by the presence of POL both in vivo and in vitro, and finally the observation that in neither case was there a requirement for the antigens to be deaggregated. It was shown that DNP-(Fab) 2 fragments prepared from HGG induced DNP-specific tolerance indicating that the Fc piece was not required for tolerance induction in this in vitro system. DNP-bovine serum albumin was less effective than DNP-HGG or DNP-(Fab)2. Preincubation with subtoxic concentrations of DNP-lysine of DNP-epsilon-capric acid had only a marginal effect on DNP responsiveness. Since nu/nu mice, lacking in detectable T-cell function, were used as spleen cell donors, this work provides further evidence that B-cell tolerance to thymus-dependent antigens can be induced without the participation of T cells. It is suggested that B-cell tolerance to thymus-dependent antigens occurs when the antigen in a sufficient concentration and over a sufficient period of time has direct access to the B cell. This contact with antigen must be in the absence of an additional influence provided either by adjuvants like endotoxin or POL, or by activated macrophages, which may be stimulated by activated T cells; otherwise not tolerance but B-cell activation will occur.


1977 ◽  
Vol 145 (3) ◽  
pp. 473-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
M G Goodman ◽  
W O Weigle

The effect of 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) and alpha-thioglycerol (alpha TG) on proliferation and polyclonal activation of lymphocytes was studied in cultures of spleen cells from C3H mice. Inclusion in serum-free or serum-containing medium of the optimal concentration (5 x 10(-5) M) of either 2-ME or alpha TG resulted in highly significant uptake and incorporation of tritiated thymidine ([3H]TdR) into DNA and in morphological blast transformation. These phenomena were dose-dependent, with both lower and higher doses causing less marked effects. The kinetic peak of these responses was found to occur at day 3 of culture. Improved cellular viability could not explain these results, because by day 3 there was no significant difference in viability between cells cultured in the presence or absence of 2-ME. 2-ME evoked a proliferative response in cultures of congenitally athymic (nu/nu) spleen cells that exhibited a similar but lower dose-response profile compared with that of heterozygous (nu/+) littermates. Cultures of bone marrow-derived (B) lymphocytes, generated by treatment of spleen cells with rabbit antithymocyte serum and complement, incorporated [3H]TdR to a degree at least equal to that of normal spleen cell cultures. Thymus-dependent (T) cells did not support significant 2-ME, alpha TG, or Concanavalin A responses in the absence of serum. However, when cultured in 5% fetal calf serum, definite T-cell responses occurred, though always of a lower magnitude than B-cell responses in this system. When the enriched B-cell and T-cell preparations were co-cultured, a synergistic response was noted. Macrophage dependency of the 2-ME and alpha TG effect was shown to be minimal. It is likely that the greater effectiveness of alpha TG relative to 2-ME is due to differences in the chemical structure of these two thiol compounds. The advantages of utilizing 2-ME and alpha TG as probes in the study of lymphocyte activation are evaluated and their possible mechanisms of action are discussed.


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