Literature DB >> 28363897

Differentiation of germinal center B cells into plasma cells is initiated by high-affinity antigen and completed by Tfh cells.

Nike J Kräutler1, Dan Suan1, Danyal Butt1, Katherine Bourne1, Jana R Hermes1, Tyani D Chan1,2, Christopher Sundling1, Warren Kaplan3,2, Peter Schofield1, Jennifer Jackson1, Antony Basten1,2, Daniel Christ1,2, Robert Brink4,2.   

Abstract

Plasma cells (PCs) derived from germinal centers (GCs) secrete the high-affinity antibodies required for long-term serological immunity. Nevertheless, the process whereby GC B cells differentiate into PCs is uncharacterized, and the mechanism underlying the selective PC differentiation of only high-affinity GC B cells remains unknown. In this study, we show that differentiation into PCs is induced among a discrete subset of high-affinity B cells residing within the light zone of the GC. Initiation of differentiation required signals delivered upon engagement with intact antigen. Signals delivered by T follicular helper cells were not required to initiate differentiation but were essential to complete the differentiation process and drive migration of maturing PCs through the dark zone and out of the GC. This bipartite or two-signal mechanism has likely evolved to both sustain protective immunity and avoid autoantibody production.
© 2017 Kräutler et al.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28363897      PMCID: PMC5413338          DOI: 10.1084/jem.20161533

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Med        ISSN: 0022-1007            Impact factor:   14.307


Introduction

Germinal centers (GCs) are transient structures that form around the follicular dendritic cell (FDC) networks located within secondary lymphoid organs 4–7 d after challenge with foreign T cell–dependent antigens (Gatto and Brink, 2010; Victora and Nussenzweig, 2012). Antigen-specific B cells recruited into GCs undergo somatic hypermutation (SHM) of the Ig variable region genes that encode the binding specificity of the clonal B cell receptor (BCR). Clones acquiring increased affinity for antigen via SHM are preferentially retained within the GC in a process known as positive selection (Berek et al., 1991; Jacob et al., 1991). In addition, differentiation of GC B cells into antibody-secreting plasma cells (PCs) is restricted to those with high affinity for antigen (Smith et al., 2000; Phan et al., 2006). Together, these processes ensure that the GC output is made up of the most effective antibodies possible, thus providing the basis for long-term serological immunity after infection and vaccination (Plotkin et al., 2008). GC B cells consist of spatially and phenotypically distinct light-zone (LZ) and dark-zone (DZ) populations with CXCR4lo CD86hi and CXCR4hi CD86lo cell surface phenotypes, respectively (Victora et al., 2010; Bannard et al., 2013). The signals that sustain GC B cell responses are localized within the LZ in the form of (a) intact antigen displayed on the surface of FDCs and (b) T follicular helper cells (Tfh cells) that bind processed antigenic peptides presented with class II MHC molecules on the B cell surface (Gatto and Brink, 2010; Victora and Nussenzweig, 2012). LZ B cells transit to the DZ where they undergo cell division and SHM before returning to the LZ. Preferential activation of high-affinity GC B cells in the LZ is widely accepted to mediate positive selection. However, PCs appear to exit from the DZ of the GC (Meyer-Hermann et al., 2012), and it remains unclear where and how PC differentiation is initiated within GCs. Conclusions drawn from mathematical modeling (Meyer-Hermann et al., 2006), two-photon microscopy (Allen et al., 2007), and loading of GC B cells with extrinsic peptide (Victora et al., 2010) have led to the suggestion that high-affinity GC B cells receive enhanced Tfh cell help. However, definitive identification of the stimulus that determines selective differentiation of high-affinity GC B cells into PCs awaits detailed characterization of the differentiation process within GCs and the impact of specific abrogation of signals delivered by direct engagement of intact antigen on FDCs versus those provided by Tfh cell help.

Results and discussion

To facilitate such a study, we developed a high-resolution in vivo model in which the phenotype and fate of high- and low-affinity GC B cells are clearly identifiable. CD45.1-marked B cells from SWHEL mice, expressing the anti–hen egg lysozyme (HEL) specificity of the HyHEL10 mAb (Phan et al., 2003), were transferred into wild-type (CD45.2+) recipient mice and challenged with the low-affinity (Κ ∼107 M-1) HEL3X protein coupled to sheep RBCs (SRBCs; HEL3X-SRBCs; Fig. 1 A; Paus et al., 2006; Chan et al., 2012). Donor SWHEL B cells form GCs on days 4–5 of the response (Chan et al., 2009) and undergo affinity-based selection to HEL3X. By day 9, ∼50% of IgG1-switched LZ and DZ B cells possess high affinity for HEL3X (i.e., LZhi/DZhi GC B cells) as defined by flow cytometric staining with limiting HEL3X (Fig. 1 B). High-affinity SWHEL GC B cells carry the Y53D Ig heavy chain substitution (Fig. S1; Phan et al., 2006), which conveys an ∼100-fold increase in HEL3X-binding affinity (Chan et al., 2012).
Figure 1.

Identification of high- and low-affinity LZ and DZ SW (A) General experimental strategy. (B) Flow cytometric gating used to sort and characterize donor-derived SWHEL GC B cells. IgG1+ GC B cells are resolved into high- and low-affinity DZ and LZ populations (DZhi, DZlo, LZhi, and LZlo). (C) Heat map showing genes differentially expressed between DZ and LZ GC B cells regardless of BCR antigen affinity. Genes encoding markers used to define the DZ and LZ subsets (Cd86 and Cxcr4) are indicated in red. The fold-change cutoff was set to ≥1.5984 (= fold-change up-regulation of Cxcr4 in DZ vs. LZ) with P ≤ 0.0005. (D and E) Heat maps showing genes differentially expressed according to BCR antigen affinity within either the DZ (D) or LZ (E). (F) GSEA of relative gene expression in total LZ versus total DZ GC B cells (left) or LZlo versus LZhi GC B cells (middle) against the gene set identified as up-regulated after CD40L stimulation of the human GC B cell line Ramos (Basso et al., 2004) and LZlo versus LZhi GC B cells against genes up-regulated by antigen (HEL) stimulation of B cells expressing an IgM BCR with an IgG1 cytoplasmic tail (Horikawa et al., 2007). FDRq, false discovery rate. Gene expression data represent four independent experiments of 25 mice per experiment.

Identification of high- and low-affinity LZ and DZ SW (A) General experimental strategy. (B) Flow cytometric gating used to sort and characterize donor-derived SWHEL GC B cells. IgG1+ GC B cells are resolved into high- and low-affinity DZ and LZ populations (DZhi, DZlo, LZhi, and LZlo). (C) Heat map showing genes differentially expressed between DZ and LZ GC B cells regardless of BCR antigen affinity. Genes encoding markers used to define the DZ and LZ subsets (Cd86 and Cxcr4) are indicated in red. The fold-change cutoff was set to ≥1.5984 (= fold-change up-regulation of Cxcr4 in DZ vs. LZ) with P ≤ 0.0005. (D and E) Heat maps showing genes differentially expressed according to BCR antigen affinity within either the DZ (D) or LZ (E). (F) GSEA of relative gene expression in total LZ versus total DZ GC B cells (left) or LZlo versus LZhi GC B cells (middle) against the gene set identified as up-regulated after CD40L stimulation of the human GC B cell line Ramos (Basso et al., 2004) and LZlo versus LZhi GC B cells against genes up-regulated by antigen (HEL) stimulation of B cells expressing an IgM BCR with an IgG1 cytoplasmic tail (Horikawa et al., 2007). FDRq, false discovery rate. Gene expression data represent four independent experiments of 25 mice per experiment. Using gene expression microarray analysis, we confirmed that HEL3X-specific LZ and DZ GC B cells differentially express a core set of 62 genes regardless of antigen affinity (Fig. 1 C) and that this gene expression signature corresponds closely to that previously identified in anti-NP GC responses (Fig. S2 A; Victora et al., 2010). However, upon further analysis, we found additional sets of genes displaying affinity-dependent expression, particularly within the LZ compartment (Fig. 1, D and E). Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) confirmed previous findings (Victora et al., 2010) that LZ rather than DZ GC B cells possess a gene expression signature that most closely mirrors that of a GC B cell line (Ramos) after CD40 ligand (CD40L) stimulation (Fig. 1 F, left; Basso et al., 2004). Interestingly, this signature was stronger in LZlo compared with LZhi cells (Fig. 1 F, middle), suggesting that LZhi cells may receive signals other than those derived from Tfh cells. A gene expression signature derived from antigen-stimulated B cells expressing a BCR with an IgG1 cytoplasmic tail (Horikawa et al., 2007) showed a slightly stronger similarity to LZhi versus LZlo GC B cells (Fig. 1 F, right). Overall, however, it was not possible to make strong conclusions about the signals delivered to LZhi versus LZlo GC B cells on the basis of gene expression profiling alone. We next set out to (a) characterize the process of PC differentiation within the GC and (b) identify the impacts on this process of specific abrogation of antigen engagement versus Tfh cell help. We found that DZ B cells displayed a more prominent PC gene signature (Mori et al., 2008) than LZ B cells (Fig. S2 B), with DZhi cells in particular expressing canonical PC genes (e.g., Prdm1/Blimp1, Sdc1, Cd93, Igj, and Xbp1; Fig. 2 A) and exhibiting a strong PC gene expression signature relative to DZlo cells (Fig. 2 B). Nevertheless, a PC gene signature was also evident in LZhi versus LZlo cells (Fig. 2 C), and analysis of responses from SWHEL B cells carrying the Blimp1 reporter gene (Kallies et al., 2004) confirmed that PC-lineage cells (Blimp1-GFP+) are present within both the DZhi and LZhi compartments (Fig. 2 D and Fig. S2 C). Based on established PC biology (Kallies et al., 2004), we hypothesized that the GC cells with lowest Blimp1-GFP reporter and highest BCR (IgG1) expression were those most recently committed to PC differentiation. This was supported by the fact that Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi cells expressed higher levels of B220 and CD45 than Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo PC-lineage cells (Fig. 2 E; Jensen et al., 1989; Lalor et al., 1992). Significantly, we found that Blimp1-GFP+ cells in the LZ almost exclusively possess an early PC-lineage phenotype (Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi; Fig. 2 F). Therefore, our data indicated that PC differentiation is initiated by signals delivered to LZhi GC B cells, with subsequent transition to a late PC phenotype (Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo) occurring after migration into the DZ. This is consistent with a previous report that presumptive PC-lineage cells expressing high levels of the Blimp1-inducing transcription factor IRF4 (Sciammas et al., 2006) are present in the LZ of human tonsillar GC (Falini et al., 2000) and that the LZhi compartment defined in the present study displays the highest levels of Irf4 mRNA expression in the GC (Fig. 2 A).
Figure 2.

Identification of early and late PC-lineage cells in the GC and enrichment of early PCs in the LZ. (A) Heat map of selected genes known to be up-regulated (top eight) or down-regulated (bottom three) in PCs, indicating a strong PC gene expression signature in the DZhi compartment. (B and C) GSEA of differential gene expression according to antigen affinity within the DZ (B) and LZ (C) compartments, against gene sets either up-regulated (left) or down-regulated (right) in PCs (Mori et al., 2008). FDRq, false discovery rate. (D) Proportion of cells within each of the four GC subcompartments detected as Blimp1-GFP+ on day 9 of the SWHEL.Blimp1 response to HEL3X-SRBCs. (E, top) Day 9 GC B cells derived from SWHEL.Blimp1 and SWHEL.Blimp1 donor B cells resolving Blimp1-GFPlo, IgG1hi, and Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo subpopulations. (Bottom) Histogram overlays showing higher B220 and CD45 staining on the Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi population. (F) Flow cytometric analysis of the LZ and DZ phenotypes of Blimp1-GFP+ IgG1+ GC B cells. Data from are representative of five independent experiments of five mice per group. Flow cytometry plots are concatenated data from five recipient mice. P-values were calculated using a paired Student’s t test. *, 0.01 ≤ P < 0.05; **, 0.001 ≤ P < 0.01.

Identification of early and late PC-lineage cells in the GC and enrichment of early PCs in the LZ. (A) Heat map of selected genes known to be up-regulated (top eight) or down-regulated (bottom three) in PCs, indicating a strong PC gene expression signature in the DZhi compartment. (B and C) GSEA of differential gene expression according to antigen affinity within the DZ (B) and LZ (C) compartments, against gene sets either up-regulated (left) or down-regulated (right) in PCs (Mori et al., 2008). FDRq, false discovery rate. (D) Proportion of cells within each of the four GC subcompartments detected as Blimp1-GFP+ on day 9 of the SWHEL.Blimp1 response to HEL3X-SRBCs. (E, top) Day 9 GC B cells derived from SWHEL.Blimp1 and SWHEL.Blimp1 donor B cells resolving Blimp1-GFPlo, IgG1hi, and Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo subpopulations. (Bottom) Histogram overlays showing higher B220 and CD45 staining on the Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi population. (F) Flow cytometric analysis of the LZ and DZ phenotypes of Blimp1-GFP+ IgG1+ GC B cells. Data from are representative of five independent experiments of five mice per group. Flow cytometry plots are concatenated data from five recipient mice. P-values were calculated using a paired Student’s t test. *, 0.01 ≤ P < 0.05; **, 0.001 ≤ P < 0.01. To interrogate the specific roles of Tfh cell help versus antigen engagement in PC differentiation, we again challenged transferred SWHEL.Blimp1 B cells with HEL3X-SRBCs. On day 6 of the response (after GC formation), recipients were injected with mAbs that block (anti-CD40L) or deplete (anti-CD4) Tfh cell help, and the effect on GC responses was assessed 3 d later (day 9; Fig. 3, A and B). To block BCR access to FDC-bound antigen (HEL3X), recipients were injected with HyHEL10*, a soluble IgG1 homologue of the SWHEL BCR carrying three heavy chain mutations (S31R, Y53D, and Y58F) that confer very high affinity (Κ >10−10 M-1; Chan et al., 2012) for HEL3X. To exclude possible FcγR-mediated effects in this case, control recipients were injected with HyHEL9, an IgG1 mAb that binds HEL and HEL3X with very high affinity (Κ >10−10 M−1) but does not compete with HyHEL10 (Fig. 3 A; Smith-Gill et al., 1984).
Figure 3.

Blocking antigen access, but not Tfh cell help, prevents initiation of PC differentiation in the GC. (A) Schematic of antigen engagement and reception of cognate CD4+ Tfh cell help by SWHEL B cells in unmanipulated GCs (top), plus the mAb-based approaches used to specifically block Tfh cell help (bottom left) or block engagement of intact antigen by the SWHEL BCR (bottom right). Both HyHEL10* and HyHEL9 bind to HEL3X, but only HyHEL10* blocks access to the antigen by the SWHEL BCR. (B) Experimental design for mAb-blocking experiments. SWHEL.Blimp1 B cells were permitted to form GCs in response to HEL3X-SRBCs and recipients and then given a single injection of mAbs 2 or 3 d before spleen harvest and analysis on day 9. (C and D) Impact of 3 d of mAb treatment on IgG1+ PC-lineage cells in GCs derived from SWHEL.Blimp1 donor B cells. Representative flow cytometry profiles are shown (C), as well as enumeration of early (Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi) and late (Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo) PC-lineage populations in individual recipients (D). (E and F) Impact of 2 d of HyHEL10* treatment analyzed as for C and D. Data from each mAb treatment are representative of two to four independent experiments of five mice per group. Flow cytometry plots are concatenated data from five recipient mice. P-values were calculated using an unpaired Student’s t test. **, 0.001 ≤ P < 0.01.

Blocking antigen access, but not Tfh cell help, prevents initiation of PC differentiation in the GC. (A) Schematic of antigen engagement and reception of cognate CD4+ Tfh cell help by SWHEL B cells in unmanipulated GCs (top), plus the mAb-based approaches used to specifically block Tfh cell help (bottom left) or block engagement of intact antigen by the SWHEL BCR (bottom right). Both HyHEL10* and HyHEL9 bind to HEL3X, but only HyHEL10* blocks access to the antigen by the SWHEL BCR. (B) Experimental design for mAb-blocking experiments. SWHEL.Blimp1 B cells were permitted to form GCs in response to HEL3X-SRBCs and recipients and then given a single injection of mAbs 2 or 3 d before spleen harvest and analysis on day 9. (C and D) Impact of 3 d of mAb treatment on IgG1+ PC-lineage cells in GCs derived from SWHEL.Blimp1 donor B cells. Representative flow cytometry profiles are shown (C), as well as enumeration of early (Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi) and late (Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo) PC-lineage populations in individual recipients (D). (E and F) Impact of 2 d of HyHEL10* treatment analyzed as for C and D. Data from each mAb treatment are representative of two to four independent experiments of five mice per group. Flow cytometry plots are concatenated data from five recipient mice. P-values were calculated using an unpaired Student’s t test. **, 0.001 ≤ P < 0.01. Treatment with either HyHEL10* anti-CD4 or CD40L for 3 d led to similar (40–60%) reductions in the overall size of the GC response, with the DZ compartment most impacted in each case (Fig. S3 A). However, only antigen blockade with HyHEL10* abolished PC differentiation, removing both early (Blimp1-GFPlo IgG1hi) and late (Blimp1-GFPhi IgG1lo) PC-lineage cells (Fig. 3, C and D). The fact that both anti–Tfh cell treatments reduced GC size without preventing PC differentiation indicated that the abrogation of PC differentiation by HyHEL10* cannot be attributed to impaired antigen presentation and reduced Tfh cell help. Instead, HyHEL10* must act by preventing delivery of signals normally imparted to LZhi GC B cells directly upon antigen engagement. The specific impact of antigen blockade on the induction of PC differentiation was also evident after 2 d of HyHEL10* treatment (from days 7 to 9), which selectively depleted early PC-lineage cells (Fig. 3, E and F) including all LZ phenotype cells (not depicted). Analysis of the IgG1− (predominantly IgG2b+) PC-lineage cells in the GC showed similar results (not depicted), indicating that the triggering of the PC differentiation pathway by antigen engagement is a mechanism that is likely to apply generally to IgG-switched GC responses. Although the overall numbers of PC-lineage cells were largely unchanged by abrogation of Tfh cell help, anti-CD4 (but not anti-CD40L) treatment had a pronounced qualitative impact. Thus, in direct contrast to antigen blockade, Tfh cell depletion resulted in the relative enrichment of early PC-lineage cells (Fig. 3, C and D). Accordingly, anti-CD4 (but not anti-CD40L) treatment also increased the fraction of PC-lineage cells that exhibited an LZ phenotype (Fig. 4, A and B). To determine whether this shift in the phenotype of PC-lineage cells was associated with physical retention in the LZ, immunofluorescence histology was undertaken. PC-lineage cells were identifiable by their strong cytoplasmic expression of IgG1 and localized primarily within the DZ of control GCs before appearing to exit through the base of the DZ (Fig. 4 C and Fig. S3 B; Meyer-Hermann et al., 2012). As has been described previously (Angelin-Duclos et al., 2000; Meyer-Hermann et al., 2012), many PC-lineage cells (30–40% by our enumeration) are found in small clusters in or just outside the GC, suggesting that ongoing cell division may occur during early PC differentiation. LZ PC-lineage cells were in natural proximity to LZ-resident FDCs (Fig. 4 C), raising the possibility that they may access antigen via the immune complexes displayed on the FDC surface. Strikingly, LZ PC-lineage cells were greatly enriched in GCs from mice treated with anti-CD4 (Fig. 4 C). LZ retention of PC-lineage cells was not seen upon treatment with anti-CD40L (Fig. S3 C), confirming that Tfh cell–derived signals other than CD40L are required to drive the LZ egress and phenotypic maturation of LZhi GC B cells that have been previously licensed to initiate PC differentiation upon direct engagement of antigen.
Figure 4.

PC-lineage cells are enriched in the LZ after depletion of CD4 (A and B) GC responses were established from SWHEL.Blimp1 B cells and subjected to 3-d treatment with either anti-CD40L (A) or anti-CD4 (B) as outlined in Fig. 3. (Left) Representative flow cytometry profiles indicate the impact of mAb treatments on the LZ and DZ phenotypes of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells (Blimp1-GFP+). (Right) The proportions of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells that fell within the DZhi, DZlo, LZhi, and LZlo compartments in individual recipients were also enumerated. (C) Immunofluorescence histology of spleens from recipient mice 9 d after transfer of SWHEL B cells plus HEL3X-SRBCs and 3 d after injection of isotype control or anti-CD4 mAb. The B cell follicle (Fo) is marked by IgD (white), the LZ by CD35 (FDCs; red), and the DZ by CXCR4 (blue). The unstained T cell zone (TZ) is also indicated. IgG1+ PC-lineage cells are identifiable by bright (cytoplasmic) staining (green). Frequencies of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells identified within the LZ (containing CD35+ FDCs) by immunofluorescence analysis were 7% (5/66) in isotype-treated and 69% (76/110) in anti-CD4–treated mice (enumerated over 17 and 16 individual GCs, respectively). Bars, 50 µm. Data are representative of two to four independent experiments of five mice per group (A and B) or are representative of four independent experiments of five mice per group (C). P-values were calculated using an unpaired Student’s t test. ***, P < 0.001.

PC-lineage cells are enriched in the LZ after depletion of CD4 (A and B) GC responses were established from SWHEL.Blimp1 B cells and subjected to 3-d treatment with either anti-CD40L (A) or anti-CD4 (B) as outlined in Fig. 3. (Left) Representative flow cytometry profiles indicate the impact of mAb treatments on the LZ and DZ phenotypes of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells (Blimp1-GFP+). (Right) The proportions of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells that fell within the DZhi, DZlo, LZhi, and LZlo compartments in individual recipients were also enumerated. (C) Immunofluorescence histology of spleens from recipient mice 9 d after transfer of SWHEL B cells plus HEL3X-SRBCs and 3 d after injection of isotype control or anti-CD4 mAb. The B cell follicle (Fo) is marked by IgD (white), the LZ by CD35 (FDCs; red), and the DZ by CXCR4 (blue). The unstained T cell zone (TZ) is also indicated. IgG1+ PC-lineage cells are identifiable by bright (cytoplasmic) staining (green). Frequencies of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells identified within the LZ (containing CD35+ FDCs) by immunofluorescence analysis were 7% (5/66) in isotype-treated and 69% (76/110) in anti-CD4–treated mice (enumerated over 17 and 16 individual GCs, respectively). Bars, 50 µm. Data are representative of two to four independent experiments of five mice per group (A and B) or are representative of four independent experiments of five mice per group (C). P-values were calculated using an unpaired Student’s t test. ***, P < 0.001. The exquisite selectivity of PC differentiation for high-affinity GC cells (Phan et al., 2006) means that its underlying mechanism must be tightly linked to antigen affinity. This condition is clearly satisfied by our finding that signals delivered upon antigen engagement are responsible for the initiation of PC differentiation among LZhi GC B cells. Although it remains unclear whether LZhi cells present more peptide antigen than LZlo cells, our gene microarray data raise the question of whether LZhi cells do preferentially receive Tfh cell help (Victora et al., 2010; Shinnakasu et al., 2016). A determining role for Tfh cells in driving PC differentiation had been proposed based on the finding that GC B cells undergo DZ migration and PC differentiation en masse when they are loaded with exogenous peptide recognized by resident Tfh cells (Victora et al., 2010). Our observations do indeed support the conclusion that Tfh cell help promotes DZ migration of committed PC-lineage cells, interestingly via signals other than CD40L. However, because depletion of Tfh cell help did not impact upon the initiation of PC differentiation in our study, we argue that boosting of Tfh cell help with exogenous peptide provides a supraphysiological stimulus to GC B cells that can drive PC differentiation regardless of BCR affinity, much like B cells stimulated with excess CD40L and cytokines in vitro (Hodgkin et al., 1994). Thus, although Tfh cell help is clearly required to progress PC differentiation and migration within the GC, it is signals delivered directly upon BCR engagement of intact antigen, most likely from the surface of FDCs, that initiate this process under physiological conditions. Therefore, our findings recall the bipartite two-signal paradigm of immune activation originally proposed by Bretscher and Cohn (1970) to prevent activation of self-reactive lymphocytes. Applied to the dynamic BCR repertoire of somatically mutating GC B cells, the need for a discriminating signal 1 (engagement of high-affinity antigen) to be supplemented with signal 2 (cognate Tfh cell help) provides a mechanism not only for selective production of high-affinity antiforeign antibodies, but also of preventing production of high-affinity autoantibodies that can arise because of chance SHM events (Brink, 2014). The specific nature of the stimulus that initiates PC differentiation after engagement of FDC-bound antigen remains unclear. Although there are conflicting data regarding the ability of the BCRs of GC B cells to deliver intracellular signals (Khalil et al., 2012; Nowosad et al., 2016), many ligands associated with FDCs can engage GC BCRs and may act with or without BCR signaling to initiate PC differentiation. These include complement fragments (e.g., C3d), adhesion molecules (ICAM-1/VCAM-1), IL-6, B cell–activating factor, and C4BP (El Shikh et al., 2010; Goodnow et al., 2010). An intriguing question is whether signals delivered directly upon antigen engagement as opposed to enhanced antigen presentation may also be the primary driver of positive selection in the GC. The iterative nature of positive selection as opposed to the linear progression of PC differentiation makes this a more difficult issue to resolve. However, the clear implication of our findings is that either (a) antigen engagement acts as the master regulator of both positive selection and PC differentiation within the GC or (b) these two key processes rely on distinct selective mechanisms.

Materials and methods

Mice, adoptive transfers, and in vivo antibody treatments

SWHEL mice (Phan et al., 2003) were maintained on a congenic CD45.1 (Ptprc) C57BL/6 background. To facilitate tracking of PC differentiation, SWHEL mice were interbred with Blimp1 mice (Kallies et al., 2004). For adoptive transfers, 6–10-wk-old wild-type C57BL/6 recipient mice (Australian BioResources) received 3 × 104 HEL-binding SWHEL B cells intravenously in combination with 2 × 108 HEL3X-conjugated SRBCs (Paus et al., 2006). To block interaction of GC B cells with Tfh cells or native antigen, mice were treated with 200 µg anti-CD4 (GK1.5; rat IgG2b; Bio X Cell), 200 µg anti-CD40L (MR-1; hamster IgG; University of California, San Francisco [UCSF] Monoclonal Antibody Core), or 50 µg HyHEL10* (HyHEL10 carrying Y53D/S31R/Y58 mutations; mouse IgG1; produced in house) at the indicated time points. Control groups received equal amounts of the respective isotype control antibodies. Animal studies were approved and conducted in compliance within the guidelines set down by the Garvan/St. Vincent’s Animal Ethics Committee.

HEL proteins and HyHEL antibodies

Recombinant HEL3X was produced in yeast (Pichia pastoris) and purified from culture supernatants as previously described (Paus et al., 2006). HyHEL10* IgG1 mAb was expressed in HEK293 cells and purified as previously described (Butt et al., 2015), and HyHEL9 was supplied by the UCSF Monoclonal Antibody Core.

Flow cytometry

Recipient splenocytes were prepared and stained for cell surface HEL3X and IgG1 as previously described (Chan et al., 2012) and subsequently incubated with the additional directly conjugated antibodies and streptavidin reagents. Donor-derived (SWHEL) GC B cells were identified as CD45.1+, CD45.2−, B220+, and CD38lo (Fig. 1 B). Flow cytometric data were acquired on an LSRII SORP flow cytometer (BD), and data were analyzed by FlowJo software (Tree Star). For sort purification of single (SHM analysis) or bulk GC B cells, samples were isolated using a FACSAria III flow cytometer (BD).

SHM analysis

Single LZhi, LZlo, DZhi, and DZlo IgG1+ SWHEL GC B cells (see gates in Fig. 1 B) were sorted into 96-well plates, and the variable region exon of the SWHEL immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region exon (HyHEL10) was PCR amplified and sequenced as previously described (Paus et al., 2006).

mRNA microarray and computational data analysis

SWHEL B cell subpopulations (minimum 16,800 cells) were gated as outlined in Fig. 1 B and sorted directly into TRIzol (Invitrogen), and RNA extraction was performed according to the manufacturer’s instructions. To improve recovery, RNA was precipitated with GlycoBlue (Thermo Fisher Scientific). RNA quality and quantity was determined using a Bioanalyzer 2100 (Agilent Technologies). RNA samples were reverse transcribed, amplified, labeled, and fragmented using Ovation Pico WTA, WT Ovation Exon Module, and Encore Biotin Module (NuGen) and hybridized with a whole-transcript gene array on a Mouse Gene 1.0 ST array chip by the Ramaciotti Centre for Genomics (University of New South Wales). One of four LZhi samples did not pass the quality control data assessment of the microarray (Console) and was therefore excluded from the analysis. Computational analysis of gene expression was performed on GenePattern (data normalization, determination of differential gene expression by LimmaGP, and GSEA preranked by fold-change; Broad Institute). For generation of heat maps, transcripts were excluded if they failed to reach a minimal mean expression of log2(x) ≥4. Cutoffs (fold-change and p-values) are indicated in the relevant figures. Genes displayed in heat maps were hierarchically clustered using Pearson correlation.

Immunofluorescence histology

Splenic cryosections were prepared and stained as previously described (Chan et al., 2009) using the antibodies and fluorescent reagents. Slides were imaged on an upright microscope (DM5500; Leica Biosystems), and images were analyzed using Photoshop CS5 (version 12.1; Adobe). Strong staining was observed for PC-lineage cells expressing high levels of cytoplasmic IgG1 in addition to weak cell surface staining for IgG1+ GC B cells. For clarity, images of IgG1+ cells presented in this study show only the brightly staining PC-lineage cells.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analyses were undertaken using a paired or unpaired two-tailed Student’s t test in Prism (GraphPad Software). Significant p-values are indicated in figures for the following ranges: *, 0.01 ≤ P < 0.05; **, 0.001 ≤ P < 0.01; ***, P < 0.001. In all summary figures, each data point represents an individual mouse, and bars represent the mean. In bar graphs, error bars represent standard error of the mean.

Accession no.

Gene expression microarray data were deposited to the Gene Expression Omnibus under accession no. GSE94638.

Online supplemental material

Fig. S1 shows the SHM analysis in the four GC compartments on day 9 of the response of SWHEL B cells to HEL3X-SRBCs. Fig. S2 shows GSEA analyses of LZ and DZ gene expression signatures and flow cytometric detection of Blimp1-GFP+ PC-lineage cells in the four GC compartments. Fig. S3 shows the effects of antibody treatments on GC size and composition as well as additional immunofluorescence histology analysis of IgG1+ PC-lineage cells within GC structures.
  34 in total

Review 1.  Germinal centers.

Authors:  Gabriel D Victora; Michel C Nussenzweig
Journal:  Annu Rev Immunol       Date:  2012-01-03       Impact factor: 28.527

Review 2.  Control systems and decision making for antibody production.

Authors:  Christopher C Goodnow; Carola G Vinuesa; Katrina L Randall; Fabienne Mackay; Robert Brink
Journal:  Nat Immunol       Date:  2010-07-20       Impact factor: 25.606

3.  Imaging of germinal center selection events during affinity maturation.

Authors:  Christopher D C Allen; Takaharu Okada; H Lucy Tang; Jason G Cyster
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-12-21       Impact factor: 47.728

4.  Elimination of germinal-center-derived self-reactive B cells is governed by the location and concentration of self-antigen.

Authors:  Tyani D Chan; Katherine Wood; Jana R Hermes; Danyal Butt; Christopher J Jolly; Antony Basten; Robert Brink
Journal:  Immunity       Date:  2012-11-08       Impact factor: 31.745

Review 5.  The imperfect control of self-reactive germinal center B cells.

Authors:  Robert Brink
Journal:  Curr Opin Immunol       Date:  2014-03-28       Impact factor: 7.486

6.  Transition in CD45 isoform expression during differentiation of normal and abnormal B cells.

Authors:  G S Jensen; S Poppema; M J Mant; L M Pilarski
Journal:  Int Immunol       Date:  1989       Impact factor: 4.823

7.  Maturation of the immune response in germinal centers.

Authors:  C Berek; A Berger; M Apel
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1991-12-20       Impact factor: 41.582

8.  Plasma cell ontogeny defined by quantitative changes in blimp-1 expression.

Authors:  Axel Kallies; Jhagvaral Hasbold; David M Tarlinton; Wendy Dietrich; Lynn M Corcoran; Philip D Hodgkin; Stephen L Nutt
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2004-10-18       Impact factor: 14.307

9.  bcl-2 transgene expression inhibits apoptosis in the germinal center and reveals differences in the selection of memory B cells and bone marrow antibody-forming cells.

Authors:  K G Smith; A Light; L A O'Reilly; S M Ang; A Strasser; D Tarlinton
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2000-02-07       Impact factor: 14.307

10.  Enhancement and suppression of signaling by the conserved tail of IgG memory-type B cell antigen receptors.

Authors:  Keisuke Horikawa; Stephen W Martin; Sarah L Pogue; Karlee Silver; Kaiman Peng; Kiyoshi Takatsu; Christopher C Goodnow
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  2007-04-09       Impact factor: 14.307

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  81 in total

1.  IL-23 Promotes a Coordinated B Cell Germinal Center Program for Class-Switch Recombination to IgG2b in BXD2 Mice.

Authors:  Huixian Hong; Min Gao; Qi Wu; PingAr Yang; Shanrun Liu; Hao Li; Peter D Burrows; Daniel Cua; Jake Y Chen; Hui-Chen Hsu; John D Mountz
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2020-06-17       Impact factor: 5.422

2.  Intrinsic properties of human germinal center B cells set antigen affinity thresholds.

Authors:  Kihyuck Kwak; Nicolas Quizon; Haewon Sohn; Avva Saniee; Javier Manzella-Lapeira; Prasida Holla; Joseph Brzostowski; Jinghua Lu; HengYi Xie; Chenguang Xu; Katelyn M Spillane; Pavel Tolar; Susan K Pierce
Journal:  Sci Immunol       Date:  2018-11-30

3.  B Cell Receptor Crosslinking Augments Germinal Center B Cell Selection when T Cell Help Is Limiting.

Authors:  Jackson Steed Turner; Fang Ke; Irina Leonidovna Grigorova
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2018-11-06       Impact factor: 9.423

4.  Outflanking immunodominance to target subdominant broadly neutralizing epitopes.

Authors:  Davide Angeletti; Ivan Kosik; Jefferson J S Santos; William T Yewdell; Carolyn M Boudreau; Vamsee V A Mallajosyula; Madeleine C Mankowski; Michael Chambers; Madhu Prabhakaran; Heather D Hickman; Adrian B McDermott; Galit Alter; Jayanta Chaudhuri; Jonathan W Yewdell
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Intestinal CD4 Depletion in HIV / SIV Infection.

Authors:  Ronald S Veazey
Journal:  Curr Immunol Rev       Date:  2019

6.  The quantity of CD40 signaling determines the differentiation of B cells into functionally distinct memory cell subsets.

Authors:  Takuya Koike; Koshi Harada; Shu Horiuchi; Daisuke Kitamura
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-06-21       Impact factor: 8.140

7.  The Quantitative Assessment of the Secreted IgG Repertoire after Recall to Evaluate the Quality of Immunizations.

Authors:  Klaus Eyer; Carlos Castrillon; Guilhem Chenon; Jérôme Bibette; Pierre Bruhns; Andrew D Griffiths; Jean Baudry
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2020-07-15       Impact factor: 5.422

Review 8.  T Follicular Helper Cell Biology: A Decade of Discovery and Diseases.

Authors:  Shane Crotty
Journal:  Immunity       Date:  2019-05-21       Impact factor: 31.745

9.  Antibody Affinity Shapes the Choice between Memory and Germinal Center B Cell Fates.

Authors:  Charlotte Viant; Georg H J Weymar; Amelia Escolano; Spencer Chen; Harald Hartweger; Melissa Cipolla; Anna Gazumyan; Michel C Nussenzweig
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2020-10-29       Impact factor: 41.582

10.  Adenosine deaminase-1 enhances germinal center formation and functional antibody responses to HIV-1 Envelope DNA and protein vaccines.

Authors:  Ebony Gary; Margaret O'Connor; Marita Chakhtoura; Virginie Tardif; Ogan K Kumova; Delphine C Malherbe; William F Sutton; Nancy L Haigwood; Michele A Kutzler; Elias K Haddad
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2020-04-10       Impact factor: 3.641

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