scholarly journals Lack of N regions in fetal and neonatal mouse immunoglobulin V-D-J junctional sequences.

1990 ◽  
Vol 172 (5) ◽  
pp. 1377-1390 ◽  
Author(s):  
A J Feeney

Much of T and B lymphocyte receptor diversity derives from the addition of nontemplated N regions at the junctions of receptor gene elements, although fetal T cells expressing gamma/delta receptors lack N regions. I have sequenced immunoglobulin H chain variable regions of PCR-amplified DNA and cDNA from fetal and newborn mouse liver and spleen cells. These sequences showed an absence of N regions. Only 1/87 DNA sequences and 17/146 RNA sequences contained N regions, in striking contrast to adult Ig sequences. These data show that N region insertion is a developmentally regulated process in B cells as well as in T cells, and demonstrate that receptor diversity in neonatal B cells is limited by the absence of N regions as well as by biased usage of Vh genes.

1988 ◽  
Vol 167 (6) ◽  
pp. 2011-2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Baer ◽  
A Forster ◽  
I Lavenir ◽  
T H Rabbitts

We previously detected mRNAs in a number of human T cell lines with a probe from within the Ig VH gene locus. We now show these mRNAs consist of Ig VH genes expressed in T cells. In one human T cell line, two RNA species have been studied and found to come from transcripts of unrearranged VH segments in which the leader exon, normally associated with VH transcripts in B cells, is replaced by a novel 5' exon (ET) not encoding a hydrophobic leader peptide. In genomic DNA, this new ET exon is adjacent to a pseudo-VH gene that has not been observed in mature mRNA. This implies that RNA splicing controls association of the new exon with the expressed VH segments. Hence, VH transcription does indeed occur in T cells, but is qualitatively different from that in B cells.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Favour O. Oladipupo ◽  
Cheng-Rong Yu ◽  
Ezekiel Olumuyide ◽  
Yingyos Jittaysothorn ◽  
Jin Kyeong Choi ◽  
...  

Abstract STAT3 transcription factor induces differentiation of naïve T cells into Th17 cells and loss of STAT3 in T cell prevents development of CNS autoimmune diseases. However, function of STAT3 in the B lymphocyte subset is not well understood. In this study, we have generated mice lacking STAT3 in CD19+ B cells (CD19-STAT3KO) and investigated intrinsic and extrinsic functions of STAT3 in B cells and its potential role in resistance or pathogenesis of organ-specific autoimmune diseases. We show that STAT3 regulates metabolic mechanisms in B cells with implications for bioenergetic and metabolic pathways that control cellular homeostasis in B cells. Thus, loss of STAT3 in CD19-STAT3KO cells perturbed growth and apoptosis by inducing rapid entry of B cells into the S-phase of the cell cycle, decreasing expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors and upregulating pro-apoptotic proteins. We further show that the CD19-STAT3KO mice develop severe experimental autoimmune uveitis (EAU), an animal model of human uveitis. Exacerbated uveitis in CD19-STAT3KO mice derived in part from enhanced expression of costimulatory molecules on B cells, marked increase of Th17 responses and increased recruitment of granulocytes into the neuroretina. The enhanced autoimmunity upon deletion of STAT3 in B cells is also recapitulated in experimental autoimmune encephalitis, a mouse model of multiple sclerosis and thus support our conclusion that STAT3 deletion in B cells enhanced inflammation and the effects observed are not model specific. Our data further indicate that STAT3 pathway modulates interactions between B and T cells during EAU resulting in alteration of lymphocyte repertoire by increasing levels of autoreactive pathogenic T cells while suppressing development and/or expansion of immune-suppressive lymphocytes (Bregs and Tregs). Taken together, STAT3 exerts diametrically opposite effects in lymphocytes, with loss of STAT3 in B cells exacerbating uveitis whereas Stat3 deletion in T cells confers protection.


1983 ◽  
Vol 157 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
P K Mongini ◽  
W E Paul ◽  
E S Metcalf

The IgM, IgG subclass, IgE, and IgA anti-trinitrophenyl (TNP) antibody (Ab) response of B cells to the type 2 antigen TNP-Ficoll was studied in athymic nude mice and in the in vitro splenic focus assay. Results from the splenic focus assay in which purified B lymphocyte preparations had been transferred to irradiated nu/nu recipients indicate that many TNP-Ficoll stimulated B cell clones secrete multiple isotypes and hence appear to be undergoing intraclonal isotype switching. Although the frequency of clones secreting each of the IgG subclasses was found to correlate with 5' to 3' Igh-gamma gene order, the frequency of IgE and IgA-secreting clones did not appear to be influenced by the respective position of Igh-epsilon and Igh-alpha on the chromosome. Unlike clones that secreted anti-TNP Ab of the IgG subclasses, IgE and IgA anti-TNP Ab-secreting clones did not have a high propensity for coexpression of isotypes encoded by 5' Igh-C genes. These data suggest that three distinct switching pathways may be employed by B cells responding to TNP-Ficoll: a common IgG pathway, an IgE pathway, and an IgA pathway. The presence of T cells resulted in a preferential enhancement of the production of anti-TNP Ab of those IgG subclasses which were least represented in the absence of T cells, i.e., IgG2b and IgG2a. No significant enhancement of IgE anti-TNP clonal frequency was found in the presence of T lymphocytes, but T cells were found to significantly enhance the clonal expression of IgA anti-TNP Ab. Although a relatively large number of B cell clones were found to synthesize IgE and IgA anti-TNP Ab in the splenic focus assay, relatively little or no secretion of these isotypes was detected in immune mice. Possible explanations for this apparent discrepancy are discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 724-727 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. G. GUDMUNDSSON ◽  
R. ARNGRÍMSSON ◽  
S. ARINBJARNARSON ◽  
A. OLAFSSON ◽  
T. JONSSON

Previous reports have indicated that inflammatory mechanisms may be involved in the pathogenesis of Dupuytren’s disease and it has even been suggested that this condition is a T-cell mediated autoimmune disorder. We investigated peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets from 21 patients with Dupuytren’s disease and compared them with ten healthy blood donors. The Dupuytren’s patients had an increase in DR+ T-cells compared with healthy controls. Furthermore, patients with both palmar and plantar involvement had a higher percentage of DR+ T-cells than those with only the palm affected. The percentage of circulating CD5+ B-cells was lower in the Dupuytren’s patients compared with the control group; this feature was marginally significant for the whole group of Dupuytren’s patients but was strongest in the group of patients with both palmar and plantar involvement. These findings support previous suggestions that immunological mechanisms, involving activated T-cells and probably also B-cells, are involved in the pathogenesis of Dupuytren’s disease.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 49-49
Author(s):  
Xiao J. Yan ◽  
Emilia Albesiano ◽  
Gloria Telusma ◽  
Nicola Zanesi ◽  
Carlo M. Croce ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Eμ-T cell leukemia-1 (TCL-1) transgenic (Tg) mice serve as models of human B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). These animals develop oligoclonal expansions of CD5+ B cells, one of which transforms into a B-CLL-like cell at ~13 - 18 months of age. A major unanswered question is whether the IgV gene restrictions seen in the TCL1 Tg model resemble those identified in human B-CLL. Therefore we analyzed the DNA sequences of the expressed, rearranged VHDJH and VLJL from 11 TCL1 Tg mice for V gene use, association with specific D and J segments, and shared H and L CDR3 motifs. Methods: Total RNA was isolated from spleens and lymph nodes of mice with obvious leukemia and reverse-transcribed to cDNA. To determine the Ig VH genes used by B cell clonal expansions, consensus FR1 primers and consensus JH primers were used for PCR. For Ig VL genes, Vκ consensus primers and Cκ primers were used. PCR products were either sequenced directly or cloned into vectors and then analyzed. DNA sequences were compared to the mouse Ig V gene germline genes deposited in NCBI GenBank and IMGT V-Quest. To confirm that nucleotide differences were actual point somatic mutations and not polymorphisms of known VH germline genes or heretofore unrecognized germline genes, PCR was performed on DNA from splenocytes of non-Tg mice using primers specific for the intron upstream of FR1 and the recombination signal sequences 3′ of the gene. PCR products were cloned and up to 60 colonies were sequenced. Using this approach, three new germline genes were identified and reported to GenBank. HCDR3 motifs were used to search both nucleotide and protein databases to identify similar sequences of known antigen specificity or B-cell subset origin. Results: DNA sequences of the VHDJH and VLJL from all (n=11) TCL1 Tg mice studied were <2% different from the most similar germline counterpart. Eight of the 11 clones used VH 1 family genes and the other three used VH 3, 5 and 12 family genes. HCDR3 and LCDR3 of these sequences frequently contained charged amino acids at the V-(D)-J junctions. Database searches for sequences similar to those of the TCL1 clones revealed groups of non-B-CLL sequences with identical or very similar HCDR3 motifs; some of these groups used the same VH gene and others used different VH genes. These structurally similar antibodies were either autoantibodies or antibodies produced by B-1 cells. One anti-bacterial antibody also was included. Conclusions: The clones that eventually become leukemic in TCL1 mice resemble those of human B-CLL cases with the worst clinical outcome in that they do not exhibit significant levels of Ig V gene mutations and they are structurally similar to autoantibodies and anti-microbial antibodies. Therefore, this model will be valuable in analyzing the development and progression of B-CLL cells from normal CD5+ B cells and the role that antigen-receptor engagement by autoantigens and microbial antigens plays in this process.


1972 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Feldmann ◽  
Antony Basten

Tissue cultures with two compartments, separated by a cell impermeable nuclepore membrane (1 µ pore size), were used to investigate the mechanism of T-B lymphocyte cooperation. It was found that collaboration was as effective when the T and B lymphocyte populations were separated by the membrane as when they were mixed together. Critical tests were performed to verify that the membranes used were in fact cell impermeable. The specificity of the augmentation of the B cell response by various T cell populations was investigated. Only the response of B cells reactive to determinants on the same molecule as recognized by the T cells was augmented markedly. Specific activation of thymocytes by antigen was necessary for efficient collaboration across the membrane. The response of both unprimed and hapten-primed spleen cells was augmented by the T cell "factor" although, as expected, hapten-primed cells yielded greater responses. The T cell factor acted as efficiently if T cells were present or absent in the lower chamber. Thus the site of action of the T cell factor was not on other T cells, but was either on macrophages or the B cells themselves. The T cell-specific immunizing factor did not pass through dialysis membranes. The experiments reported here help rule out some of the possible theories of T-B cell collaboration. Clearly T-B cell contact was not necessary for successful cooperation to occur in this system. Possible theoretical interpretations of the results and their bearing on the detailed mechanism of T-B lymphocyte cooperation are discussed.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 258-258
Author(s):  
Johann Greil ◽  
Tobias Rausch ◽  
Thomas Giese ◽  
Obul Reddy Bandapalli ◽  
Volker Daniel ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 258 Primary immunodeficiencies represent model diseases for the mechanistic understanding of the human innate and the adaptive immune response and are per se clinically highly relevant, because in SCID patients infections by opportunistic pathogens are typically life-threatening early in life. We identified an infant of consanguineous parents suffering from a novel form of SCID, who presented with a life-threatening Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia. This entity was characterized by agammaglobulinemia and profoundly deficient T-cell function despite quantitatively normal T- and B-lymphocytes. Lymphocyte proliferation was strongly inhibited after stimulation of PBMCs with T-cell mitogens such as PHA, Con A, or anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody. The expression of several T-cell response associated cytokines upon stimulation with PMA/ionomycin was dramatically reduced in comparison to normal controls. By contrast, proliferation induced by the classical B-cell mitogen PWM was almost comparable to healthy controls. Immunophenotyping revealed a predominantly naïve phenotype (CD45RA+ CCR7+) in CD4+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes, whereas central memory T-lymphocytes (CD45RA− CCR7+) were nearly absent. B-lymphocytes from peripheral blood were mainly naïve B-cells (CD27−) with a uniformly immature transitional B-lymphocyte phenotype (CD24++, CD38++). Patient B-lymphocytes retained the ability to proliferate and differentiate in response to BCR-independent stimuli, while their response to BCR activation was defective. Our findings thus revealed a combined defect of TCR-mediated T-lymphocyte functions and BCR-mediated B-lymphocyte functions but did not enable us to link the immunological phenotype with one of the known molecularly defined categories of SCID. Diagnostic whole-exome sequencing and systematic variant categorization revealed a single pathogenic homozygous nonsense mutation of the caspase recruitment domain 11 (CARD11) gene. CARD11 is a scaffold protein that is known to be required for the assembly and activation of the NF-kB complex. In reconstitution assays we demonstrated that the patient derived truncated CARD11 protein is defective in antigen receptor signaling and NF-kB activation. Several lines of evidence substantiate the involvement of the identified CARD11 mutation in the new form of SCID that we report here. First, PCR and Sanger re-sequencing validated the truncating CARD11 mutation to be homozygous in the patient and heterozygous in the parents, in agreement with the recessive transmission of the mutation through the healthy consanguineous parents. Second, CARD11 is a scaffold protein required for TCR- and BCR-induced NF-kB activation as well as lymphocyte activation and proliferation, which is specifically expressed in hematopoietic cells, consistent with a causative role of CARD11 mutations in the context of an immune disorder. Third, the GUK domain of CARD11, which is missing in the mutated form of CARD11 due to truncation, was previously reported to be necessary for NF-kB activation by PMA/ionomycin treatment, further supporting the presumed damaging nature of the homozygous CARD11 mutation observed in the female patient reported here. Finally, the immunological findings in this patient are compatible with the phenotype of a previously described Card11 −/− k.o. mouse, which shows a selective defect in NF-κB activation leading to diminished antigen receptor or PKC mediated proliferation and defective cytokine production in T-cells and B-cells. Thus, we have identified an inactivating CARD11 mutation linking defective NF-kB signaling with a novel cause of autosomal recessive SCID, which must be considered in the diagnostic assessment of patients with suspected SCID but with quantitatively normal T-cells. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1617-1617
Author(s):  
Ceri Jones ◽  
Thet Lin ◽  
Guy Pratt ◽  
Chris Fegan ◽  
Duncan Baird ◽  
...  

Abstract Telomere length (TL) is a prognostic factor in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) with short TL being a predictor of time to first treatment, progression-free survival and overall survival. However, little is known about telomere dynamics through the course of the disease. Most studies conducted on CLL patients have measured TL in unselected peripheral blood mononuclear cell populations, often at a single time point. In this context, longitudinal analysis of TL is problematic as patients who undergo disease progression and/or treatment may have a significantly altered proportion of CLL cells in their peripheral blood compared to T-cells. In order to ensure that we specifically analyzed the TL of the tumor cells, we used fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) to sort populations of CD19+CD5+ CLL B-cells and CD3+T-cells from samples taken from individual patients at different time points throughout their disease (n=30). We then performed high-resolution single telomere length analysis (STELA) on these sorted subsets of cells and analyzed their telomere dynamics over time (median follow up 69 months). We found a signifcant difference in the CLL B-cell TL (p=0.05) with a mean erosion rate of -52base pairs/year. TL change in the 18/30 patients who remained untreated at all time points was -51bp/year. In the 6/30 patients who received treatment following their initial TL measurements the mean TL change was -40bp/year. Finally, for 11/30 patients samples were only available in the post treatment setting, for these patients the TL change was lower at -29bp/year. The difference in TL erosion between these different groups was not statistically significant. These data shows that the TL erosion in CLL B-cells is modest and similar to that of an age-matched population (Steenstrup et al 2013). Furthermore, CLL B-cells showed no reduction in TL standard deviation signifying the maintenance of intraclonal diversity (p=0.78). In contrast to the modest changes in TL observed in the CLL B-cells, TL change in the T-cell populations were much more pronounced with mean change of -119bp/year (p=0.02). Furthermore, there was a trend towards increased erosion in the treated patient group when compared with the untreated group (-230bp/year vs -85bp/year, p=0.14) suggesting that therapy may have an impact on the composition of T-cell populations in treated CLL patients. In keeping with this notion, the T-cells derived from CLL patients showed a significant reduction in TL standard deviation (P=0.02), implying that the T-cell repertoire is significantly altered during the course of the disease. In conclusion, this study of TL in ex vivo CLL B-cell samples shows TL erosion during long-term follow-up that is comparable to that seen in non-leukemic leukocyte and lymphocyte samples (Lansdorp et al 1999). In keeping with a recent study, we showed that the erosion rate correlated with starting TL, with the longest telomeres showing the largest erosion and the shortest telomeres showing elongation (Rosenquist et al 2013). This implies that the radical telomere shortening observed in some CLL patients is an early disease event which is in keeping with our previous data demonstrating that a proportion of stage A patients possess very short dysfunctional telomeres (Lin et al 2010). Given that short TL is associated with an inferior clinical outcome, our data indicates that part of the explanation for the clinical heterogeneity seen in CLL may be telomere dependent whereby if the mutagenic event occurs in a B lymphocyte which already has shorter TL then a more aggressive disease occurs whereas if it occurs in a B lymphocyte with longer TL then the outcome is less aggressive disease. Finally, T-cells in CLL patients show markedly more TL erosion corroborating previous studies suggesting there is extensive and abnormal T-cell proliferation in CLL. Whether the CLL cells themselves are driving T-cell TL erosion is at present unknown. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1993 ◽  
Vol 177 (5) ◽  
pp. 1367-1381 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Mohan ◽  
S Adams ◽  
V Stanik ◽  
S K Datta

Only a fraction (12%) of 268 "autoreactive" T cell clones derived from lupus-prone mice can selectively induce the production of pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibodies in vitro and accelerate the development of lupus nephritis when transferred in vivo. The CDR3 loops of T cell receptor beta chains expressed by these pathogenic T helper (Th) clones contain a recurrent motif of anionic residues suggesting that they are selected by autoantigens with cationic residues. Herein, we found that approximately 50% of these pathogenic Th clones were specific for nucleosomal antigens, but none of them responded to cationic idiopeptides shared by variable regions of pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibodies. Nucleosomes did not stimulate the T cells as a nonspecific mitogen or superantigen. Only the pathogenic Th cells of lupus responded to nucleosomal antigens that were processed and presented via the major histocompatibility class II pathway. Although the presentation of purified mononucleosomes to the Th clones could be blocked by inhibitors of endosomal proteases, neither of the two components of the nucleosomes--free DNA or histones by themselves--could stimulate the Th clones. Thus critical peptide epitopes for the Th cells were probably protected during uptake and processing of the nucleosome particle as a whole. The nucleosome-specific Th clones preferentially augmented the production of IgG autoantibodies to histone-DNA complex in vitro. In vivo, nucleosome-specific, CD4+ T cells were not detectable in normal mice, but they were found in the spleens of lupus-prone mice as early as 1 mo of age, long before other autoimmune manifestations. Immunization of young, preautoimmune lupus mice with nucleosomes augmented the production of autoantibodies and markedly accelerated the development of severe glomerulonephritis. Previously, crude preparations containing nucleosomes were shown by others to have polyclonal mitogenic activity for B cells from normal as well as lupus mice. Identification here of pure mononucleosome as a lupus-specific immunogen for the Th cells that selectively help the pathogenic anti-DNA autoantibody producing B cells of lupus could lead to the design of specific therapy against this pathogenic autoimmune response.


Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 746-751
Author(s):  
A Saxon ◽  
RE McIntyre ◽  
RH Stevens ◽  
RP Gale

Three recipients of HLA-identical bone marrow transplants developed chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) and hypergammaglobulinemia. All three had evidence of abnormal B-lymphocyte function, including a polyclonal increase in immunoglobulins (Ig), antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, lymphocytotoxins, and increased immune complexes. T- lymphocyte function was also abnormal, including decreased mitogen reactivity and delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity. The cellular basis of these immune abnormalities was studied in an in vitro system in which we analyzed spontaneous pokeweed mitogen (PWM) driven Ig synthesis. Multiple defects in both T- and B-lymphocyte function were detected. In contrast to normal B cells, circulating B cells from all three patients with cGVHD spontaneously synthesized in vitro greater than 200 ng of IgG and in two of the three greater than 175 ng of IgM. This increase in spontaneous Ig synthesis was not due to a deficiency of regulatory cells, since T cells from the three patients suppressed spontaneous Ig synthesis in a normal fashion. In contrast to this increased spontaneous Ig synthesis, the response of the patients' B cells to PWM-driven Ig synthesis was normal. Using the PWM system we demonstrated several defects in these patients' T cells, including increased suppressor activity and decreased helper cell activity. These data indicate that some patients with cGVHD have multiple defects in both T- and B-cell function that may contribute to their profound immune deficiency.


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