Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated a role for B cells, not associated with antibody production, in protection against lethal secondary infection of mice with Francisella tularensislive vaccine strain (LVS). However, the mechanism by which B cells contribute to this protection is not known. To study the specific role of B cells during secondary LVS infection, we developed an in vitro culture system that mimics many of the same characteristics of in vivo infection. Using this culture system, we showed that B cells do not directly control LVS infection but that control of LVS growth is mediated primarily by LVS-primed T cells. Importantly, B cells were not required for the generation of effective memory T cells since LVS-primed, B-cell-deficient (BKO) mice generated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells that controlled LVS infection similarly to LVS-primed CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from wild-type mice. The control of LVS growth appeared to depend primarily on gamma interferon and nitric oxide and was similar in wild-type and BKO mice. Rather, the inability of BKO mice to survive secondary LVS infection was associated with marked neutrophil influx into the spleen very early after challenge. The neutrophilia was directly associated with B cells, since BKO mice reconstituted with naive B cells prior to a secondary challenge with LVS had decreased bacterial loads and neutrophils in the spleen and survived.