scholarly journals T-B cell interaction inhibits spontaneous apoptosis of mature lymphocytes in Bcl-2-deficient mice.

1995 ◽  
Vol 182 (4) ◽  
pp. 1101-1109 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Nakayama ◽  
K Nakayama ◽  
L B Dustin ◽  
D Y Loh

Bcl-2 expression is tightly regulated during lymphocyte development. Mature lymphocytes in Bcl-2-deficient mice show accelerated spontaneous apoptosis in vivo and in vitro. Stimulation of Bcl-2-deficient lymphocytes by anti-CD3 antibody inhibited the spontaneous apoptosis not only in T cells but also in B cells. The rescue of B cells was dependent on the presence of T cells, mainly through CD40L and interleukin (IL)-4. Furthermore, we generated Bcl-2-deficient mice transgenic for a T cell receptor or an immunoglobulin, both specific for chicken ovalbumin, to test for antigen-specific T-B cell interaction in the inhibition of the spontaneous apoptosis. The initial T cell activation by antigenic peptides presented by B cells suppressed apoptosis in T cells. Subsequently, T cells expressed CD40L and released ILs, leading to the protection of B cells from spontaneous apoptosis. These results suggest that the antiapoptotic signaling via CD40 or IL-4 may be largely independent of Bcl-2. Engagement of the Ig alone was not sufficient for the inhibition of B cell apoptosis. Thus, the physiological role of Bcl-2 in mature lymphocytes may be to protect cells from spontaneous apoptosis and to extend their lifespans to increase the opportunity for T cells and B cells to interact with each other and specific antigens in secondary lymphoid tissues. Bcl-2, however, appears to be dispensable for survival once mature lymphocytes are activated by antigen-specific T-B cell collaboration.

Vaccines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1074
Author(s):  
Julia Ritzau-Jost ◽  
Andreas Hutloff

Follicular helper T cells (Tfh) are the T cell subset providing help to B cells for the generation of high-affinity antibodies and are therefore of key interest for the development of vaccination strategies against infectious diseases. In this review, we will discuss how the generation of Tfh cells and their interaction with B cells in secondary lymphoid organs can be optimized for therapeutic purposes. We will summarize different T cell subsets including Tfh-like peripheral helper T cells (Tph) capable of providing B cell help. In particular, we will highlight the novel concept of T cell/B cell interaction in non-lymphoid tissues as an important element for the generation of protective antibodies directly at the site of pathogen invasion.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 4455-4465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Wang ◽  
Ondrej Horvath ◽  
Andrea Hamm-Baarke ◽  
Mireille Richelme ◽  
Claude Grégoire ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT NTAL (non-T-cell activation linker, also called LAB) and LAT (linker for activation of T cells) are evolutionarily related transmembrane adaptor proteins that are phosphorylated upon immunoreceptor engagement. Using quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, both NTAL and LAT were found to be expressed in B cells. However, LAT expression was limited to early B cells, whereas NTAL expression typified mature B cells. To delineate their roles in B-cell development and function, Ntal-deficient mice were generated and crossed with Lat-deficient mice. B cells developed in Lat −/− Ntal −/− double-deficient mice and in mice lacking either of the two adaptors with the same efficiency as in wild-type mice. Upon B-cell antigen receptor cross-linking, Ntal −/− B cells exhibited slightly increased Ca2+ mobilization and proliferation. In addition, Ntal-deficient mice had increased levels of natural antibodies and slightly increased humoral response to a T-dependent antigen. Normal titers of serum-specific immunoglobulins were produced in response to a T-cell-independent antigen. Although NTAL is also expressed in plasma cells, its absence did not affect the hypergammaglobulinemia E and G1 that developed in mice with a mutation in tyrosine 136 of LAT. Therefore, NTAL does not play a role in B cells symmetric to the role played by LAT in T cells.


2003 ◽  
Vol 197 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Fillatreau ◽  
David Gray

We investigated the mechanism of CD4 T cell accumulation in B cell follicles after immunization. Follicular T cell numbers were correlated with the number of B cells, indicating B cell control of the niche that T cells occupy. Despite this, we found no role for B cells in the follicular migration of T cells. Instead, T cells are induced to migrate into B cell follicles entirely as a result of interaction with dendritic cells (DCs). Migration relies on CD40-dependent maturation of DCs, as it did not occur in CD40-deficient mice but was reconstituted with CD40+ DCs. Restoration was not achieved by the activation of DCs with bacterial activators (e.g., lipopolysaccharide, CpG), but was by the injection of OX40L–huIgG1 fusion protein. Crucially, the up-regulation of OX40L (on antigen-presenting cells) and CXCR-5 (on T cells) are CD40-dependent events and we show that T cells do not migrate to follicles in immunized OX40-deficient mice.


1978 ◽  
Vol 148 (5) ◽  
pp. 1171-1185 ◽  
Author(s):  
U Yamashita ◽  
E M Shevach

To study the histocompatibility restriction between macrophages and helper T cells, carrier primed guinea pig T cells were positively selected in vitro with antigenpulsed macrophages for 7 days and the selected T cells were then mixed with hapten-primed B cells and stimulated with antigen in a modified Mishell-Dutton system. Helper T cells could only be selected with syngeneic, but not allogeneic, antigen-pulsed macrophages and would then collaborate only with syngeneic, but not allogeneic, hapten-primed spleen cells. When F1 T cells were selected with antigen-pulsed parental macrophages they would only collaborate with B cells of the same parental strain as the macrophages used in the selection culture. These results are strongly in support of the view that the primed T cell is activated by carrier determinants of the nominal antigen in association with Ia antigens on macrophages and the helper T cell, in turn, activates B cells which bear the same Ia antigens and determinants of the nominal antigen bound to immunoglobulin receptors on their surface. In addition, in experiments with antigens the response to which is controlled by I-linked genes, we demonstrated that primed (responder X nonresponder)F1 T cells would only collaborate with B cells of the responder parent. The defect appeared to be at the level of the B cell in that the addition to the cultures of antigen-presenting cells of the responder type did not restore the ability of F1 T cells to collaborate with non-responder B cells.


1972 ◽  
Vol 136 (4) ◽  
pp. 737-760 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Feldmann

The mechanism of interaction of T and B lymphocytes was investigated in an in vitro hapten carrier system using culture chambers with two compartments separated by a cell impermeable nucleopore membrane. Because specific cell interaction occurred efficiently across this membrane, contact of T and B lymphocytes was not essential for cooperation which must have been mediated by a subcellular component or "factor." By using different lymphoid cell populations in the lower culture chamber and activated thymus cells in the upper chamber (with antigen present in both), it was found that the antigen-specific mediator acted indirectly on B cells, through the agency of macrophages. Macrophages which had been cultured in the presence of activated T cells and antigen acquired the capacity to specifically induce antibody responses in B cell-containing lymphoid populations. Trypsinization of these macrophages inhibited their capacity to induce immune responses, indicating that the mediator of cell cooperation is membrane bound. By using antisera to both the haptenic and carrier determinants of the antigen as blocking reagents, it was demonstrated that the whole antigen molecule was present on the surface of macrophages which had been exposed to activated T cells and antigen. Because specifically activated T cells were essential a component of the antigen-specific mediator must be derived from these cells. By using anti-immunoglobulin sera as inhibitors of the binding of the mediator to macrophages, the T cell component was indeed found to contain both κ- and µ-chains and was thus presumably a T cell-derived immunoglobulin. It was proposed that cell cooperation is mediated by complexes of T cell IgM and antigen, bound to the surface of macrophage-like cells, forming a lattice of appropriately spaced antigenic determinants. B cells become immunized by interacting with this surface. With this mechanism of cell cooperation, the actual pattern of antigen-B cell receptor interactions in immunization would be the same with both thymus-dependent and independent antigens. An essential feature of the proposed mechanism of cell cooperation is that macrophage-B cell interaction must occur at an early stage of the antibody response, a concept which is supported by many lines of evidence. Furthermore this mechanism of cell interaction can be elaborated to explain certain phenomena such as the highly immunogenic macrophage-bound antigen, antigenic competition, the distinction between immunity and tolerance in B lymphocytes, and the possible mediation of tolerance by T lymphocytes.


1993 ◽  
Vol 177 (4) ◽  
pp. 1215-1219 ◽  
Author(s):  
A C Lalmanach-Girard ◽  
T C Chiles ◽  
D C Parker ◽  
T L Rothstein

In comparison to B cell stimulation mediated by surface immunoglobulin (Ig) antigen receptor ligation, little is known about the intracellular events associated with T cell-dependent B cell responses. A model for the efferent phase of T cell-B cell interaction was used to examine the capacity of activated T cells to trigger nuclear expression of the trans-acting transcription factor, NF-kappa B, in B cells. Fixed, activated, but not fixed, resting Th2 cells were found to induce increased binding activity for a kappa B site-containing oligonucleotide in a time-dependent manner. This induction of NF-kappa B was eliminated by an antibody directed against a 39-kD cell interaction protein on activated T cells as well as by a soluble form of B cell CD40. Of particular relevance to intracellular signaling, NF-kappa B induction was not diminished by prior depletion of B cell protein kinase C (PKC) with phorbol myristate acetate. These results strongly suggest that T cell-dependent B cell stimulation is associated with NF-kappa B induction via p39-CD40 interaction and that this is brought about by non-PKC dependent signaling, in marked contrast to the previously documented requirement for PKC in sIg receptor-mediated stimulation. This suggest that NF-kappa B responds to more than one receptor-mediated intracellular signaling pathway in B cells and may be part of a "final common pathway" for B cell stimulation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 86 (7) ◽  
pp. e00143-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taylor B. Poston ◽  
Catherine M. O'Connell ◽  
Jenna Girardi ◽  
Jeanne E. Sullivan ◽  
Uma M. Nagarajan ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTCD4 T cells and antibody are required for optimal acquired immunity toChlamydia muridarumgenital tract infection, and T cell-mediated gamma interferon (IFN-γ) production is necessary to clear infection in the absence of humoral immunity. However, the role of T cell-independent immune responses during primary infection remains unclear. We investigated this question by inoculating wild-type and immune-deficient mice withC. muridarumCM001, a clonal isolate capable of enhanced extragenital replication. Genital inoculation of wild-type mice resulted in transient dissemination to the lungs and spleen that then was rapidly cleared from these organs. However, CM001 genital infection proved lethal forSTAT1−/−andIFNG−/−mice, in which IFN-γ signaling was absent, and forRag1−/−mice, which lacked T and B cells and in which innate IFN-γ signaling was retained. In contrast, B cell-deficient muMT mice, which can generate a Th1 response, and T cell-deficient mice with intact B cell and innate IFN-γ signaling survived. These data collectively indicate that IFN-γ prevents lethal CM001 dissemination in the absence of T cells and suggests a B cell corequirement. Adoptive transfer of convalescent-phase immune serum but not naive IgM toRag1−/−mice infected with CM001 significantly increased the survival time, while transfer of naive B cells completely rescuedRag1−/−mice from CM001 lethality. Protection was associated with a significant reduction in the lung chlamydial burden of genitally infected mice. These data reveal an important cooperation between T cell-independent B cell responses and innate IFN-γ in chlamydial host defense and suggest that interactions between T cell-independent antibody and IFN-γ are essential for limiting extragenital dissemination.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1554-1554
Author(s):  
Yongwei Zheng ◽  
Mei Yu ◽  
Anand Padmanabhan ◽  
Richard H. Aster ◽  
Renren Wen ◽  
...  

Abstract Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an antibody-mediated disorder that can cause arterial or venous thrombosis/thromboembolism, and platelet factor 4 (PF4)/ heparin-reactive antibodies are essential to the pathogenesis of HIT. Our recent studies have demonstrated that marginal zone (MZ) B cells play a major role in production of PF4/heparin-specific antibodies. However, the role of T cells in production of these pathogenic antibodies is not clear. Here we showed that PF4/heparin complex-induced production of PF4/heparin-specific antibodies was markedly impaired in mice, in which CD4 T cells were depleted by administration of GK1.5 anti-CD4 monoclonal antibody. As expected, the CD4 T cell-depleted mice responded normally to T cell-independent antigen TNP-Ficoll but not T cell-dependent antigen NP-CGG, in agreement with the lack of CD4 T cells in these GK1.5-treated mice. Further, following adoptive transfer of a mixture of wild-type splenic B cells and splenocytes from B cell-deficient μMT mice, T and B cell-deficient Rag1 knockout mice responded to PF4/heparin complex challenge to produce PF4/heparin-specific antibodies. In contrast, Rag1-deficient mice that received a mixture of wild-type splenic B cells and splenocytes from Rag1-deficient mice barely produced PF4/heparin-specific antibodies upon PF4/heparin complex challenge. These data suggest that T cells are required for production of PF4/heparin-specific antibodies. Consistent with this concept, mice with B cells lacking CD40 molecule, a B cell costimulatory molecule that helps T cell-dependent B cell responses, displayed a marked reduction of PF4/heparin-specific antibody production following PF4/heparin complex challenge. Also as expected, mice with CD40-deficient B cells were able to respond to T cell-independent antigen TNP-Ficoll but not T cell-dependent antigen NP-CGG, consistent with the lack of T-cell help in these mice. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that T cells play an essential role in production of PF4/heparin-specific antibodies by MZ B cells. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4692-4692
Author(s):  
Mauro Di Ianni ◽  
Lorenzo Moretti ◽  
Beatrice Del Papa ◽  
Maria De Ioanni ◽  
Adelmo Terenzi ◽  
...  

Abstract As Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) is associated with several defects in the T cell compartment, the impact of tumour burden on the autologous immune system was studied. Gene expression profiles (using Applied Biosystem Human Genome Microarray) identified 237 genes with significantly increased expression and 221 genes with significantly decreased expression (p<0.05) in CD3+ cells from CLL patients compared with healthy donors. Panther software analysis identified 34/237 upregulated genes and 26/221 downregulated genes that were involved in specific pathways, mainly cell differentiation and proliferation, survival, apoptosis, cytoskeleton formation, vesicle trafficking and T cell activation. The 26 dowregulated genes included Zap70, a member of the syk family protein tyrosine kinase, which is involved in T-cell activation. Zap-70 results were validated by mRNA quantification by RT-PCR (−1.77 fold in comparison with healthy controls) and by flow-cytometric analysis (Mean Intensity Fluorescence=33±12 vs 80±23.62 in controls, p<0.05). To test the hypothesis that activation with OKT3 /IL-2 could bypass these T cell deficiencies, activated T cells from 20 patients with CLL were tested in vitro for cytotoxicity (using the 51chromium release assay) against mutated and unmutated (according to IgVH mutational status) autologous B cells, DAUDI, K562 and P815 cell lines. After 10 days’ culture, the T cell count remained unchanged; CD8 cells expanded more than CD4; TCR spectratyping analysis indicated no differences in TCR repertoires. Activation restored the ZAP-70 mRNA (+1.67 fold). The 51chromium release cytotoxicity assay showed an index > 30% in 5/20 patients. The other 15 were partially cytotoxic against P815, K562 and Daudi. Cell line analysis in all 20 confirmed prevalently T cell-mediated cytotoxicity and poor NK/LAK activity. Cytotoxicity did not correlate with B cell mutational status. We tested the cytotoxic activity of autologous activated T cells in NOD/SCID mice co-transplanted with leukaemic B cells. Only activated T cells exerting cytotoxicity vs autologous B-cell CLL prevent CLL in human-mouse chimera, as confirmed by PCR and FACS analysis which visualised only CD3+ cells. In conclusion, in patients with CLL, activating autologous T cells with OKT3 /IL-2 bypasses, at least in part, the T cell immunological deficiencies. These in vitro and in vivo findings might serve to throw light on new mechanisms that could be exploited in immunotherapy designed to exert disease control.


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