Literature DB >> 17119110

Naive recirculating B cells mature simultaneously in the spleen and bone marrow.

Annaiah Cariappa1, Catharine Chase, Haoyuan Liu, Paul Russell, Shiv Pillai.   

Abstract

We have recently demonstrated that IgD(hi) B cells can occupy an extravascular perisinusoidal niche in the bone marrow in addition to the well-established follicular niche in conventional secondary lymphoid organs. The spleen has long been considered to be the site at which newly formed B lymphocytes mature into IgD(hi) naive recirculating B cells, but the existence of mutant mice that have selectively lost mature B cells in the bone marrow prompted an examination of B-cell maturation at this latter site. Following a single pulse of BrdU in intact mice, sequential labeling of more mature B-cell populations in the bone marrow suggested ongoing maturation at this site. Further evidence for B-cell maturation in the bone marrow was obtained from analyses of transitional B cells in splenectomized lymphotoxin alpha-deficient mice that lack all secondary lymphoid organs. In these mice, antibody-secreting cells recognizing multivalent antigens were also observed in the bone marrow following an intravenous microbial challenge. These data suggest that newly formed B cells mature into IgD(hi) B cells simultaneously in the spleen and the bone marrow and establish in a stringent manner that humoral immune responses can be initiated in situ in the bone marrow.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17119110     DOI: 10.1182/blood-2006-05-021089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  48 in total

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