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B Lymphocyte: Activation by Insoluble Anti-Immunoglobulin: Induction of Immunoglobulin Secretion by a T Cell-Dependent Soluble Factor
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1979
Year
Immunoglobulin SecretionLaboratory ImmunologyImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunodominanceImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingImmune SystemIg SecretionPolyacrylamide BeadsInflammationHematologyImmunochemistryCell SignalingImmunological MemoryIgg SecretionAutoimmune DiseaseImmunoengineeringImmune SurveillanceAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityT Cell ImmunityImmune FunctionCell BiologyAntibody BiologyB LymphocyteImmune Cell DevelopmentImmunoglobulin EMedicine
Abstract Purified rabbit antibodies to mouse κ chain or Fab become strongly mitogenic for mouse splenic B lymphocytes when covalently attached to the surface of polyacrylamide beads. The same antibody preparations are weakly if at all mitogenic in soluble form. The proliferative response to these anti-Ig beads is not dependent on T lymphocytes, adherent cells, serum supplement, or Fc receptor interactions. The response to anti-Ig beads can be blocked by soluble F(ab′)2 anti-Ig at concentrations that modulate surface Ig, or by excess soluble mouse IgG. Hence, the response results from direct interaction of the beads with B cells via surface Ig. In the presence of a supernatant of Con A-treated spleen cells (Con A supernatant), B lymphocytes respond to anti-Ig beads by sustained proliferation and differentiation to polyclonal IgM and IgG secretion. The response is comparable in magnitude to the lipopolysaccharide response. Ig secretion is completely dependent on the Con A supernatant, which by itself has only a small, primarily differentiative effect on isolated B lymphocytes. It can be added 22 hr after the start of culture without changing the kinetics of the response; addition at later times up to 66 hr delays the appearance of secreting cells, but not the size of the peak response. Cells from 10-day-old mice and adult male (CBA/N♂ × BALB/c♀) F1 mice fail to respond. These experiments suggest that redistribution of surface Ig by the anti-Ig beads delivers a limited proliferative signal to a subset of B lymphocytes, but that sustained cell division and differentiation to Ig secretion by anti-Ig activated B lymphocytes require soluble substances produced by activated T lymphocytes and/or T lymphocyte-activated accessory cells.