In vivo generation and function of B cells in the presence of a monoclonal anti‐IgM antibody: implications for B cell tolerance
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 17 (7) , 981-990
- https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.1830170714
Abstract
C57BL/6 mice were chronically treated with milligram doses of the noncytotoxic monoclonal anti-μb antibody MB86 (IgG1,x) from birth or from fetal life. The spleens of the manipulated animals contained large numbers (25% as compared to control mice) of B lineage cells which expressed IgMb on the surface after overnight incubation in vitro. The spleens also contained B cells whose surface IgM was unreactive with antibody MB86. A few such cells were immortalized by cell fusion. They included cells secreting μ together with λ2 chains which apparently prevent recognition by antibody MB86, and a point mutant in the first constant domain of the μ chain, changing the b to the a allotype. Cells expressing MB86− surface IgM did not selectively expand under MB86 treatment over the first few months of life. Serum Ig levels in the manipulated mice were normal except for IgM which was undetectable in most instances. In some animals low levels of MB86− IgM molecules were produced. At 7 weeks of age, mice treated with MB86 from birth produced normal-size IgG anti-(4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl)acetyl (NP) responses with the usual predominance of λ1 chain-bearing IgG1 antibodies. At the age of 5–6 months, and also in young mice treated with MB86 from fetal life, the responses were variable and presumably oligoclonal, with a tendency towards the production of antibodies with γ3 heavy and λ2 or λ3 light chains. We interpret these results to mean that B cells hit by antibody MB86 from the time of their generation become unresponsive to T cell-dependent stimulation, but are still able to expand. Occasionally, they escape functional suppression through class switching (to IgG3) upon mitogenic stimulation. At birth, C57BL/6 mice contain a mature B cell population which mediates normal immune responses under MB86 treatment and eventually dies out. Taken as a model of tolerance induction in B cells, the data provide evidence for “tolerant” cells and support the concept of an early phase of sensitivity to tolerance induction in B cell differentiation. The anti-NP response under MB86 treatment differed profoundly from control responses in idiotypic terms, but became normal as the animals recovered from suppression. This may reflect blockade by MB86 of idiotypic selection within the B cell population.This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
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