4.7 Article

Blimp-1-dependent and -independent natural antibody production by B-1 and B-1-derived plasma cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 214, Issue 9, Pages 2777-2794

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20161122

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants [NIH/NIAID R01AI051354, R01AI085568, U19AI109962]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences at the NIH [UL1 TR000002, TL1 TR000133, 2T32OD010931-09, 5T35OD010956-14, T-32 AI060555]

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Natural antibodies contribute to tissue homeostasis and protect against infections. They are secreted constitutively without external antigenic stimulation. The differentiation state and regulatory pathways that enable continuous natural antibody production by B-1 cells, the main cellular source in mice, remain incompletely understood. Here we demonstrate that natural IgM-secreting B-1 cells in the spleen and bone marrow are heterogeneous, consisting of (a) terminally differentiated B-1-derived plasma cells expressing the transcriptional regulator of differentiation, Blimp-1, (b) Blimp-1+, and (c) Blimp-1neg phenotypic B-1 cells. Blimp-1neg IgM-secreting B-1 cells are not simply intermediates of cellular differentiation. Instead, they secrete similar amounts of IgM in wild-type and Blimp-1-deficient (PRDM-1.Ex1A) mice. Blimp-1neg B-1 cells are also a major source of IgG3. Consequently, deletion of Blimp-1 changes neither serum IgG3 levels nor the amount of IgG3 secreted per cell. Thus, the pool of natural antibody-secreting B-1 cells is heterogeneous and contains a distinct subset of cells that do not use Blimp-1 for initiation or maximal antibody secretion.

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