Effect of age on humoral immunity, selection of the B-cell repertoire and B-cell development

1997 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel LeMaoult ◽  
Paul Szabo ◽  
Marc E. Weksler
Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 91-91
Author(s):  
Cihangir Duy ◽  
J. Jessica Yu ◽  
Srividya Swaminathan ◽  
Rahul R. Nahar ◽  
Soo-mi Kweon ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 91 Through DNA strand breaks resulting from somatic hypermutation and class-switch recombination, germinal center (GC) B cells are exposed to a high level of DNA damage stress. At the GC stage of development, B cells are protected against apoptosis by specific expression of BCL6, which functions as transcriptional repressor of genes in the DNA damage response pathway. In the absence of BCL6, GC formation is abrogated. During normal B cell development, BCL6 expression was only found in GCs, where the secondary B cell repertoire is shaped. Extensive DNA damage, however, also occurs during the development of the primary B cell repertoire in the bone marrow. B cell precursors in the bone marrow sustain DNA damage during V(D)J recombination at immunoglobulin heavy and light chain loci. It is currently unclear, through which mechanisms early B cell precursors are protected against extensive DNA damage stress caused by V(D)J recombination. Here we report that BCL6 plays a critical role during early B cell development by protecting pre-B cells from DNA damage-induced apoptosis during V(D)J recombination. At the transition from IL7-dependent to IL7-independent stages of B cell development, BCL6 is activated, reaches similar expression levels as in GC B cells. Compared to IL7-dependent pro-B cells and large cycling pre-B cells, BCL6 mRNA and protein levels in IL7-independent small resting pre-B cells were increased by 60- to 90-fold, respectively. We identified STAT5 as a critical negative regulator of BCL6 downstream of IL7 receptor signaling in pre-B cells. Expression of a constitutively active STAT5 mutant prevented BCL6 upregulation in differentiating pre-B cells at the transition from IL7-dependent to IL7-independent stages of B cell development. BCL6 function was then tested in bone marrow precursor cells from BCL6−/− and BCL6+/+ mice: Comparing the gene expression pattern of BCL6−/− and BCL6+/+ pre-B cells, we found that BCL6 is required for transcriptional repression of the ARF (Cdkn2a), p21 (Cdkn1a), Gadd45a and p53 genes, which all contribute to cellular senescence and cell cycle arrest. In agreement with gene expression analyses, ChIP-chip and single-locus q-ChIP studies identified ARF (Cdkn2a), p21 (Cdkn1a), Gadd45a and p53 as transcriptional targets of BCL6 in pre-B cells. BCL6-dependent transcriptional repression of these genes in pre-B cells is critical because BCL6+/+ but not BCL6−/− pre-B cells were capable to proliferate in vitro and to form pre-B cell colonies in semisolid agar. Of note, peptide-inhibition of BCL6 suppressed growth and colony formation in ARF+/+ but not ARF−/− pre-B cells, suggesting that ARF-deficiency rescues lack of BCL6 function. We conclude that BCL6-mediated transcriptional repression of ARF is critical for pre-B cell self-renewal. To determine whether BCL6 function is also required for normal early B cell differentiation in vivo, we performed a comprehensive analysis of B cell differentiation stages in bone marrow from BCL6−/− and BCL6+/+ mice. In agreement with previous studies, the overall number of B cell precursors in the bone marrow was only slightly reduced and pro-B cell and large pre-B cell populations were normal. However, the pools of small-resting pre-B cells and new emigrant B cells were reduced in BCL6−/− mice by 3- and 7-fold, respectively. While the overall numbers of mature B cells in BCL6−/− mice were normal, we found that their clonal repertoire was extremely restricted. Using spectratype analysis, we found a broad polyclonal primary B cell repertoire in BCL6+/+ mice, whereas the B cell repertoire in their BCL6−/− counterparts was strictly oligoclonal. We conclude that pre-B cell self-renewal and polyclonal B cell production critically depends on BCL6. While the self-renewal defect of BCL6-deficient pre-B cells can be numerically compensated by increased proliferation at later stages of development, the diversity of the B cell repertoire in BCL6−/− mice is permanently restricted. We conclude that BCL6 is required for pre-B cell self-renewal and the formation of a normal polyclonal B cell repertoire. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2000 ◽  
Vol 165 (2) ◽  
pp. 852-859 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean P. Fitzsimmons ◽  
Kathleen J. Clark ◽  
Howard S. Mostowski ◽  
Marjorie A. Shapiro

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 127-127
Author(s):  
Anindita Roy ◽  
Vojtech Bystry ◽  
Georg Bohn ◽  
Katerina Goudevenou ◽  
Tomas Reigl ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Development of mature B cells depends upon the expression of a functional B cell receptor (BCR) and of its immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy (H) and light (L) chains. The molecular hallmark of B cell development, somatic recombination of the genes that encode the IgH (V, D and J) and IgL (V and J) chains, takes place in B cells in primary B lymphopoiesis sites throughout development (i.e. fetal liver (FL), fetal bone marrow (FBM) and adult BM). However, the spatiotemporal relationship between the IgH repertoire in FL with that in FBM, and the impact of the fetal Ig repertoire on the long-term repertoire present in post-natal life, as well as the link between this and the development of disease, are largely unknown. Aim: To gain insights into the ontogeny of the human innate B cell repertoire by performing high resolution analysis of the IgH-Cmu repertoire of human FL, FBM and post-natal B cells. Methods: CD34negCD19pos B cells from human 2nd trimester FL and FBM, child peripheral blood (cPB) and adult peripheral blood (aPB) were isolated by flow sorting. For initial assessment of the IgM repertoire ontogeny in FL and FBM B cells, we performed CDR3 fragment length analysis of VH1-VH6 families in the B cells. To gain further insights into the ontogeny of IgH diversification, we employed 454 next generation sequencing (NGS)-based analysis of the IgVH-Cmu mRNA repertoire in FL, FBM and postnatal B cells. In total, 20 libraries generated from 17 individual, flow-sorted CD34negCD19pos B cell samples were sequenced: 5 FL (4 performed in independent duplicate libraries; GA 14-18 weeks), 3 FBM (GA 13-17 weeks), 3 cPB (age 4mo-4yrs) and 5 aPB (age 29-53 yrs) samples. Bioinformatic analysis was performed with the ARResT/Interrogate immunoprofiler, IMGT tools, and appropriate statistics. Results: Spectratyping and NGS data showed that the molecular mechanisms responsible for VDJ recombination-dependent repertoire diversification, such as convergent recombination, are active in early B cell development and as efficient as postnatal B cells in both FL and FBM. Comparably diversified B cell lymphopoiesis exists contemporaneously in FL and FBM. However, analysis of the top 100 most abundant clonotypes in each developmental stage showed that their mean abundance in FBM B cells was 10 times lower (0.12%) than in FL B cells (1.2%; p<0.0001). Reflecting this relative paucity of expanded clonotypes amongst FBM B cells, analysis of the 100 most abundant clonotypes across all developmental stages showed that 0 were present in FBM, compared to 65 in FL, 23 in cPB, and 12 in aPB. We found that this paucity of clonotypic expansions in FBM is likely due to the significant decrease in sIgM-expressing transitional and naïve B cells compared to FL (FL: 4.76±0.8% vs. FBM: 1.9±0.4%, p<0.01; and FL: 2.8±0.9% vs. FBM: 0.7±0.2%, p<0.05 respectively). Strikingly, 0.4% of all fetal life clonotypes, comprising 18.7% of the whole repertoire, were shared with the PB IgM B cell repertoire in children and adults, a pattern that is particularly pronounced for the VH6-1 gene. Reflecting the presence of high abundance clonotypes in FL but not FBM, the mean abundance of the clonotypes shared between FL and postnatal B cells was 38-fold higher than that of FBM (0.77% v 0.02%, p=0.001). Selection of these shared or public clonotypes is likely to occur in an HLA- and thus T cell-independent manner, and is therefore consistent with IgM innate humoral immune responses. Lastly, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common IgM+ mature B cell malignancy with subsets of patients with stereotyped BCR collectively accounting for ~30% of cases; we found stereotypic IgH receptors corresponding to 16/19 major CLL subsets in 3/5 FL samples and in all FBM and postnatal samples. Conclusions: The lack of mature, antigen-responsive B cells in FBM and the pronounced clonotypic expansions in FL suggest that FL is the main source of IgM natural immunity during the 2nd trimester. Our results are consistent with persisting fetal IgM+ B cells being an important source of the natural IgM repertoire also in adult life. Further, the origins of specific stereotypic IgM+ BCR associated with CLL, can be traced back to fetal B cell lymphopoiesis, suggesting that persisting fetal B cells can be subject to malignant transformation late in life. Overall, these novel data provide unique insights into the ontogeny of physiological and malignant B lymphopoiesis that spans the human lifetime. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2002 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc E. Weksler ◽  
Michele Goodhardt ◽  
Paul Szabo

1993 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 2945-2950 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilles Dietrich ◽  
Francisco J. Varela ◽  
Vincent Hurez ◽  
Majida Bouanani ◽  
Michel D. Kazatchkine

1997 ◽  
Vol 815 (1 B-Lymphocytes) ◽  
pp. 67-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
THIERRY DEFRANCE ◽  
GISÈLE BILLIAN ◽  
PETER H. KRAMMER ◽  
CHANTAL LAGRESLE

1993 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. 1035-1039 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Hu ◽  
D. Ehleiter ◽  
A. Ben-Yehuda ◽  
R. Schwab ◽  
C. Russo ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 519-529 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santi Suryani ◽  
David A. Fulcher ◽  
Brigitte Santner-Nanan ◽  
Ralph Nanan ◽  
Melanie Wong ◽  
...  

Abstract The transitional stage of B-cell development represents an important step where autoreactive cells are deleted, allowing the generation of a mature functional B-cell repertoire. In mice, 3 subsets of transitional B cells have been identified. In contrast, most studies of human transitional B cells have focused on a single subset defined as CD24hiCD38hi B cells. Here, we have identified 2 subsets of human transitional B cells based on the differential expression of CD21. CD21hi transitional cells displayed higher expression of CD23, CD44, and IgD, and exhibited greater proliferation and Ig secretion in vitro than CD21lo transitional B cells. In contrast, the CD21lo subset expressed elevated levels of LEF1, a transcription factor highly expressed by immature lymphocytes, and produced higher amounts of autoreactive Ab. These phenotypic, functional, and molecular features suggest that CD21lo transitional B cells are less mature than the CD21hi subset. This was confirmed by analyzing X-linked agammaglobulinemia patients and the kinetics of B-cell reconstitution after stem cell transplantation, which revealed that the development of CD21lo transitional B cells preceded that of CD21hi transitional cells. These findings provide important insights into the process of human B-cell development and have implications for understanding the processes underlying perturbed B-cell maturation in autoimmune and immunodeficient conditions.


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