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The Journal of Immunology, 2004, 172: 823-833.
Copyright © 2004 by The American Association of Immunologists

Progressive Surface B Cell Antigen Receptor Down-Regulation Accompanies Efficient Development of Antinuclear Antigen B Cells to Mature, Follicular Phenotype1

Lynn Heltemes-Harris2, Xiaohe Liu and Tim Manser3

Kimmel Cancer Center and Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA 19107

Previous studies have suggested that B cell Ag receptor (BCR) down-regulation by potentially pathological autoreactive B cells is associated with pathways leading to developmental arrest and receptor editing, or anergy. In this study we compare the primary development of B cells in two strains of mice expressing transgenic BCRs that differ by a single amino acid substitution that substantially increases reactivity for nuclear autoantigens such as DNA. Surprisingly, we find that both BCRs promote efficient development to mature follicular phenotype, but the strongly autoreactive BCR fails to promote marginal zone B cell development. The follicular B cells expressing the strongly autoreactive BCR do not appear to be anergic, as they robustly respond to polyclonal stimuli in vitro, are not short-lived, and can participate in germinal center reactions. Strikingly however, substantial and progressive down-modulation of surface IgM and IgD takes place throughout their primary development in the BM and periphery. We propose that BCR-autoantigen interactions regulate this pathway, resulting in reduced cellular avidity for autoantigens. This process of "learned ignorance" could allow autoreactive B cells access to the foreign Ag-driven memory B cell response, during which their self-reactivity would be attenuated by somatic hypermutation and selection in the germinal center.




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