4.5 Article

Static and dynamic components synergize to form a stable survival niche for bone marrow plasma cells

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 8, Pages 2306-2317

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.201344313

Keywords

Bone marrow; Intravital microscopy; Plasma cells; Stromal cells; Survival niche

Categories

Funding

  1. DFG [HA5354/4-1, Transregio 130, 17, SPP1468 IMMUNOBONE, 16]
  2. European Research Council [ERC-2010-AdG_20100317, 268987]
  3. International Max Planck Research School for Infectious Diseases and Immunology Berlin (IMPRS-IDI)
  4. JIMI-a DFG core facility network grant for intravital microscopy

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In the bone marrow (BM), memory plasma cells (PCs) survive for long time periods in dedicated microenvironmental survival niches, resting in terms of proliferation. Several cell types, such as eosinophils and reticular stromal cells, have been reported to contribute to the survival niche of memory PCs. However, until now it has not been demonstrated whether the niche is formed by a fixed cellular microenvironment. By intravital microscopy, we provide for the first time evidence that the direct contacts formed between PCs and reticular stromal cells are stable in vivo, and thus the PCs are sessile in their niches. The majority (similar to 80%) of PCs directly contact reticular stromal cells in a non-random fashion. The mesenchymal reticular stromal cells in contact with memory PCs are not proliferating. On the other hand, we show here that eosinophils in the vicinity of long-lived PCs are vigorously proliferating cells and represent a dynamic component of the survival niche. In contrast, if eosinophils are depleted by irradiation, newly generated eosinophils localize in the vicinity of radiation-resistant PCs and the stromal cells. These results suggest that memory PC niches may provide attraction for eosinophils to maintain stability with fluctuating yet essential accessory cells.

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