Publication | Open Access
Ly-1 B cells: functionally distinct lymphocytes that secrete IgM autoantibodies.
637
Citations
15
References
1984
Year
ImmunologyImmune SystemImmunotherapyAutoantigensAutoantibodiesLymphocyte BiologyCell SignalingUnique SubpopulationIgm SecretionAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityImmunologic DiseaseImmune FunctionCell BiologyAntibody BiologyAutoantibody ProductionPathogenesisLy-1 B SubpopulationImmunoglobulin EMedicineLy-1 B Cells
The study proposes a new perspective on mechanisms driving IgM autoantibody production. A distinct Ly‑1 B‑cell subset, enriched in NZB mice, secretes spontaneous IgM autoantibodies against ssDNA, thymocytes, and bromelain‑treated erythrocytes, indicating a functionally unique role in autoimmunity.
Studies presented here introduce another perspective on the mechanisms responsible for IgM autoantibody production. A unique subpopulation of B lymphocytes (Ly-1 B) that concomitantly expresses IgM, IgD, Ia, and Ly-1 membrane glycoproteins is present at higher frequencies in NZB and NZB-related mice. The Ly-1 B subpopulation in these autoimmune animals is responsible for the "spontaneous" IgM secretion demonstrated with cultured NZB spleen cells and contains the cells that secrete typical NZB IgM autoantibodies to single-stranded DNA and to thymocytes. In addition, the Ly-1 B population in normal mouse strains (and in NZB) contains virtually all of the spleen cells that secrete IgM autoantibodies reactive with bromelain-treated mouse erythrocytes. Since a different B-cell subpopulation (IgM+, IgD-, Ly-1) secretes most of the IgM antibodies produced in responses to exogenous antigens, we conclude that Ly-1 B cells constitute a functionally distinct B-cell population important in certain kinds of autoimmunity.
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