Literature DB >> 6332844

In vitro regulation of IgA subclass synthesis. II. The source of IgA2 plasma cells.

M E Conley, M S Bartelt.   

Abstract

In vitro regulation of IgA subclass synthesis was investigated in pokeweed mitogen (PWM)-stimulated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes. In past experiments we have demonstrated that 50% of the IgA plasma cells derived from PWM-stimulated cultures are positive for IgA1 and 50% are positive for IgA2. This observation is surprising because approximately 80% of the IgA B cells in the peripheral circulation bear IgA1 and 20% bear IgA2. To determine if the shift toward IgA2 predominance in PWM-stimulated cultures might be due to an enriched source for IgA2 plasma cells from a precursor pool of immature B cells, we used panning techniques to separate immature precursors that express surface IgM (sIgM+) from mature precursors that no longer express IgM (sIgM-). These separated B cells were cultured with equal numbers of T cells and PWM for 7 days. In all 10 experiments there was an enrichment for IgA2 in the sIgM+ cultures; 55 +/- 9.6% of the total IgA plasma cells were positive for IgA2 in the sIgM+ cultures vs 38 +/- 6.3% in the sIgM- cultures (p less than 0.001). These results indicate that both sIgM+ and sIgM- cells can give rise to IgA plasma cells in PWM-stimulated cultures and that there is an enrichment for IgA2 precursors in the sIgM+ population. Other possible regulatory mechanisms were also investigated. To determine if there was isotype switching from IgA1 to IgA2, monoclonal anti-IgA1 antibodies were added to PWM cultures. These antibodies resulted in a mean suppression of IgA1 plasma cell production of 82% with a concomitant 45% suppression of total IgA but only 4.6% suppression of IgA2. These results make it unlikely that IgA2 plasma cells in PWM-stimulated cultures are derived from cells that initially produced IgA1. To investigate the possibility that one IgA subclass might be more T cell dependent than the other, T and B cells were separated and B cells were reconstituted with T cells in ratios that varied from 1:10 to 10:1 or with irradiated T cells. These procedures did not alter the proportion of IgA plasma cells positive for IgA1 or IgA2, indicating that the two subclasses do not differ in their response to T cell signals in PWM-stimulated cultures.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6332844

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  8 in total

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  8 in total

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