The relationship between surface immunoglobulin isotype and immune function of murine B lymphocytes. III. Expression of a single predominant isotype on primed and unprimed B cells.
作者:
Zan-Bar(I),Vitetta(E S),Assisi(F),Strober(S)
状态:
发布时间1978-07-15
, 更新时间 2010-06-22
期刊:
J Exp Med
摘要:
We determined whether primed and unprimed B cells in the spleen of (BALB/c x C57BL/Ka)F(1) mice contain subpopulations that express a predominant surface Ig isotype. Spleen cells were stained for surface isotypes and sorted on the fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) in order to obtain B cells bearing predominantly IgM (mup cells), IgD (deltap cells), or IgG (gammap cells). Each population was assayed for its capacity to restore the adoptive primary and secondary anti-bovine serum albumin (BSA) antibody response in irradiated syngeneic recipients. In addition, the adoptive response restored by isotype-predominant cells was compared to that restored by isotype- positive cells (B cells bearing a given surface isotype alone or in combination with others). The experimental results show that mup cells restore the adoptive primary and secondary IgM and IgG responses to BSA, and gammaP cells restore only the primary and secondary IgG response. Deltap Cells restored the adoptive secondary IgG response, but failed to restore the adoptive primary response at the cell doses tested. GammaP Cells but not deltap cells suppressed the IgM response of the mu(+) and delta(+) cells. The contribution of isotype-predominant cells to both the adoptive primary and secondary anti-BSA response was smaller than that of B cells bearing a combination of surface isotypes. Differences in the Ig isotype pattern expressed on the surface of primed and unprimed B cells are discussed.