| Literature DB >> 33538775 |
Artur Kibler1, Bettina Budeus1, Ekaterina Homp1, Kevin Bronischewski1, Victoria Berg1, Ludger Sellmann2, Florian Murke3, Andreas Heinold3, Falko M Heinemann3, Monika Lindemann3, Isabelle Bekeredjian-Ding4, Peter A Horn3, Carsten J Kirschning5, Ralf Küppers1, Marc Seifert1.
Abstract
Human memory B cells (MBCs) are generated and diversified in secondary lymphoid tissues throughout the organism. A paired immunoglobulin (Ig)-gene repertoire analysis of peripheral blood (PB) and splenic MBCs from infant, adult, and elderly humans revealed that throughout life, circulating MBCs are comprehensively archived in the spleen. Archive MBC clones are systematically preserved and uncoupled from class-switching. Clonality in the spleen increases steadily, but boosts at midlife, thereby outcompeting small clones. The splenic marginal zone (sMZ) represents a primed MBC compartment, generated from a stochastic exchange within the archive memory pool. This is supported by functional assays, showing that PB and splenic CD21+ MBCs acquire transient CD21high expression upon NOTCH2-stimulation. Our study provides insight that the human MBC system in PB and spleen is composed of three interwoven compartments: the dynamic relationship of circulating, archive, and its subset of primed (sMZ) memory changes with age, thereby contributing to immune aging.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33538775 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20201952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307