Avian B cell precursors: Surface immunoglobulin expression is an early, possibly bursa‐independent event
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 16 (2) , 129-133
- https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.1830160204
Abstract
The avian bursa of Fabricius contains about 1 × 104 discrete follicles, each of which is colonized by a small number of lymphoid progenitor cells during embryonic life. We have previously shown (J. R. L. Pink et al., Eur. J. Immunol. 1985. 15: 617) that all, or almost all B cell progenitors in the bursae of 4-day-old chicks express cell surface IgM. In this report, we have analyzed the distribution of cell surface (s)IgM-1 allotypes within individual follicles of (M-1a/M-1b) allotype heterozygous birds. Although the majority of follicles contained a mixture of sIgM-1a+ and sIgM-1b+ cells, a significant proportion of isolated follicles contained exclusively sIgM-1a+ or sIgM-1b+ cells. Statistical analysis of the frequency of such “M-1a” and “M-1b” follicles demonstrated that the sIg+ B cells in the bursae of 4–8-week-old birds are derived from 2–4 allotypically committed precursor cells per follicle. Since we have previously shown that each bursal follicle is colonized by 2–5 pre-bursal stem cells, these cells must be committed to the eventual expression of one or other allotypic haplotype before they have undergone extensive proliferation within the bursa. In addition, we show that almost all B progenitor cells from the bursae of chicks which had been allotype suppressed as embryos were committed to synthesis of the nonsuppressed allotype, showing that this commitment was essentially complete at the time of suppression (i.e. before 19 days of incubation). Finally the bone marrow of 16-day embryos was used to reconstitute the bursal lymphocytes of cyclophosphamide-treated host embryos. Reconstitution was inhibited by anti-Ig antiserum indicating that most 16-day embryonic BM-derived bursal cell precursors also express sIgM. These results raise the possibility that expression of sIgM may be controlled by a “biological clock” rather than by any inductive capacity of the bursal microenvironment. Furthermore, these results provide further evidence that in normal birds a self-renewing sIg+ B cell population in the hatched chicken is the sole source of B cells in the adult.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
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