| Literature DB >> 1719085 |
T L Rothstein1, D L Kolber, T P Murphy, D P Cohen.
Abstract
The signals required to induce S phase entry in murine splenic B cells were found to be altered by prolonged treatment with low doses of anti-Ig antibody. Whereas fresh splenic B cells are stimulated by the combination of a phorbol ester protein kinase C agonist plus a calcium ionophore, anti-Ig-treated splenic B cells were stimulated by phorbol ester alone, in the absence of a comitogen. The majority of these phorbol ester responsive B cells expressed CD5. The phorbol ester responses of anti-Ig-treated splenic B cells paralleled those previously reported for untreated peritoneal CD5+ B cells in a number of respects: responses were not idiosyncratic to phorbol esters but occurred with nonphorbol protein kinase C agonists; phorbol ester responses were enhanced by IL-4; and, phorbol ester responses occurred rapidly and were greater at 24 than at 48 h. However, the effect of agents that act to raise intracellular levels of cAMP distinguished between anti-Ig-treated splenic B cells and untreated peritoneal B cells in that the phorbol ester responses of the former were enhanced whereas the responses of the latter were inhibited. The present results add a functional dimension to the phenotypic similarity between splenic B cells treated with anti-Ig and resident peritoneal B cells that constitutively express CD5; however, some differences in behavior were noted.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1719085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422