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*
Department of Pathology and Immunology Graduate Program, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242; and
Corixa Corporation, Seattle, WA 98101
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The B cell compartment in the mouse is heterogeneous and can be separated into distinct subsets using a number of parameters. B cell subsets can be distinguished by stage of maturation, surface phenotype, anatomical localization, and state of activation (reviewed in Ref. 3). Our laboratory has previously defined four mature murine B cell subsets based upon expression of the intermediate affinity IgE FcR, designated CD23 (4, 5, 6, 7). In the spleen, CD23 is present on conventional or follicular B cells, whereas marginal zone B cells are low to negative for this receptor. Similarly, conventional B2 B cells in the peritoneum are CD23+, whereas the B1 B cell population (both B1a and B1b) is CD23-.
Using T cell-independent (TI) stimuli, a number of investigators have compared the functional attributes of purified splenic marginal zone and follicular B cells. When stimulating cells with either soluble anti-IgM (5, 8, 9) or dextran-conjugated anti-Ig (8), follicular B cells respond by proliferating, whereas marginal zone B cells respond poorly or not at all. The lack of response in the marginal zone subset reflects their rapid entry into the apoptotic pathway following surface Ig cross-linking (9). Both populations proliferate strongly in response to LPS (5, 8, 9). Additional studies comparing the ability of marginal zone and follicular B cells to differentiate and isotype switch found both populations fully capable of producing IgM and switching to downstream isotypes when cultured with either LPS plus cytokines (5, 8, 9, 10) or dextran-conjugated anti-Ig plus cytokines (8).
A number of groups have also examined the functional characteristics of
purified peritoneal B1 and B2 B cells when treated with TI stimuli. B2
B cells, phenotypic counterparts of the follicular B cell subset,
proliferate in response to anti-IgM and LPS (5, 11, 12, 13). Similar to marginal zone B cells, B1 B cells respond
vigorously to LPS, but are unresponsive when cultured with anti-IgM
(5, 11, 12, 13). The inability to proliferate upon surface Ig
cross-linking may be due to their altered cytoplasmic status. Detailed
studies by Rothstein and coworkers (11, 14, 15, 16) have
demonstrated B1 B cells to exhibit constitutively elevated levels of
protein kinase C and nuclear activated STAT3, and to have decreased
activation of phospholipase C-
2 and NF-
B after anti-IgM
treatment. When assessing the ability of B1 and B2 B cells to
differentiate and isotype switch upon culture with LPS plus cytokines,
B2 B cells were found to produce high levels of IgM, IgG, and IgE,
while B1 B cells secreted only high levels of IgM (5, 10, 17). The latter subset produced low levels of IgG and little or
no IgE (5, 10, 17).
Given the various response patterns to TI stimuli, the question arises as to whether conventional (follicular and B2), marginal zone, and B1 B cells also exhibit differences when undergoing a TD challenge. A limited number of studies have examined the capacity of purified B cell subsets to respond to either Th cells or CD40 agonists, with mixed results. Studies by Snapper et al. (8) found marginal zone and follicular B cells to proliferate and differentiate equivalently when cultured with an activated Th2 clone. In assessing the capacity of splenic B cell subsets to proliferate when cultured with an anti-CD40 mAb, Kearney and colleagues (9) reported marginal zone B cells to exhibit a greater response compared with follicular B cells. A number of groups investigating the ability of purified B1 and B2 B cells to expand when treated with either anti-CD40 mAb or activated Th2 cells found modest or no differences between the two subsets (11, 12, 13, 18). However, in exploring the differentiative potential of B1 and B2 B cells, Tarlinton et al. (17) found a marked difference in the ability of these populations to produce IgG after stimulation with CD40L-transfected fibroblasts plus cytokines. At present, therefore, a clear understanding as to the ability of the various B cell subsets to respond to TD activation is lacking. This study thus assessed the activation potential of all four CD23-defined mature B cell subsets when treated with either soluble rCD40L in the presence of cytokines or activated Th2 clones. In addition to proliferation, the capacity of the various subsets to differentiate and isotype switch was measured. The results demonstrate marginal zone, follicular, and peritoneal B2 B cells to respond in an equivalent manner to TD-directed activation, and to require a similar set of signals to undergo proliferation, differentiation, and isotype switching. In contrast, B1 B cells exhibit different activation requirements when stimulated with CD40L or Th2 cells. Although capable of expanding and differentiating under TD conditions, B1 B cells require IL-5 for optimal responses.
| Materials and Methods |
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Female BALB/c, C3H/Hen, C57BL/6, and DBA/2 mice, 810 wk old, were purchased from Harlan Sprague-Dawley (Indianapolis, IN). CD40L-deficient ((129 x C57BL/6) x C57BL/6)F2 mice were provided by Dr. Jacques Peschon (Immunex, Seattle, WA). All mice were maintained in the specific pathogen-free animal facility at The University of Iowa (Iowa City, IA).
Flow cytometric analysis
The following mAbs were used for flow cytometric analysis and sort purification of B cell subsets: 6B2, a rat IgG anti-mouse B220; B3B4, a rat IgG anti-mouse CD23; and 2.4G2, a rat IgG anti-mouse CD16/32. The mAbs were semipurified by ammonium sulfate precipitation from serum-free HB101 (Irvine Scientific, Santa Ana, CA) hybridoma culture supernatants. mAbs were conjugated with FITC and PE using standard protocols. Texas Red-conjugated goat Ab specific for IgM (µ-chain) was purchased from Southern Biotechnology Associates (Birmingham, AL), and PE-conjugated rat anti-mouse CD5 mAb (53-7.3) was obtained from PharMingen (San Diego, CA). Biotin-conjugated 1C10 (19), a rat IgG anti-mouse CD40 mAb, was provided by DNAX (Palo Alto, CA). Chromatographically purified rat and goat IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) were used as isotype controls. FITC-Ultra-avidin was purchased from Leinco Technologies (St. Louis, MO). For flow-cytometric analysis, 5 x 105 cells were suspended in staining buffer consisting of 5% newborn calf serum (HyClone Laboratories, Logan, UT) and 0.1% NaN3 in balanced salt solution (BSS) and incubated at 4°C with conjugated Abs. To minimize nonspecific staining, 15 µg of 2.4G2 and 10 µl of rat serum were added to each of the cell suspensions. After 20 min, cells were washed and incubated with FITC-avidin. Subsequent to final washing, cells were analyzed on a Becton Dickinson (San Jose, CA) FACS 440 flow cytometer equipped with a primary argon laser, and a rhodamine 6G CR599 dye head laser (Coherent, Palo Alto, CA) pumped by a secondary argon ion laser. Residual dead cells and cell aggregates were excluded by low angle and orthogonal light scatter. FACS data were collected and analyzed using a DEC VAXstation 3200 computer equipped with DESK software (supplied by Wayne Moore, Stanford University, Stanford, CA). Final graphic output was performed with Canvas (Deneba Software, South Miami, FL) software.
IgM and IgG1 ELISA
The following reagents were used for isotype-specific ELISA
tests: Rabbit Ab specific for mouse µ-chain (Jackson ImmunoResearch)
and b7-6, a monoclonal anti-murine IgM, were used as capture and
detection Abs, respectively, for the IgM ELISA; goat Ab specific for
mouse IgG1 (Southern Biotechnology Associates) served as both capture
and detection Abs for the IgG1 ELISA. b7-6 mAb was semipurified as
described above. The mAb F5D6, a murine IgM anti-2,4,6-trinitrophenyl
(anti-TNP), and HDP1, a murine IgG1 anti-TNP, were used as isotype
standards for ELISA quantitation. The anti-TNP-specific Abs were
affinity purified by passage of culture supernatants over TNP-bovine
globulin-Sepharose 6B, followed by elution with TNP-glycine (Sigma,
St. Louis, MO). Measurement of IgM and IgG1 from 6-day culture
supernatants was quantitated based on a standard curve. All ELISA used
a biotin-conjugated detection Ab, followed by alkaline phosphatase
streptavidin (Zymed, San Francisco, CA) and subsequent development with
phosphatase substrate (Sigma). Absorbance was read at a dual wavelength
of 405 and 540 nm using a Bio-Tek Instruments EL309 plate reader
(Winooski, VT).
B cell preparation and sort purification
Peritoneal cells were obtained by injecting cold sterile BSS into the peritoneal cavity of BALB/c mice, followed by rigorous massaging of the abdomen and sterile extraction of the cell suspension. Spleen cell suspensions isolated from C3H/Hen mice were T depleted using anti-Thy-1.2 Ab (HO13.4) and complement (Pel Freeze, Rogers, AR). Both cell suspensions were spun through Fico-Lite-LM (Atlanta Biologicals, Norcross, GA), the interface collected, and washed with sterile BSS. For sterile sorting, cell suspensions were resuspended in staining buffer consisting of 5% newborn calf serum in BSS at a concentration of 20 x 106 cells/ml. Cells were incubated with FITC anti-B220 and PE anti-CD23 for 20 min at 4°C. The 2.4G2 and rat serum were added to the cells as described above. Cells were then washed, resuspended in sterile staining buffer, and sorted on a Coulter (Hialeah, FL) EPICS 753 flow cytometer. Postsort analysis revealed greater than 95% purity in each of the sorted populations.
B cell activation
Enriched or sort-purified populations were washed with sterile BSS and resuspended in medium consisting of RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) with 10% FCS (HyClone Laboratories), penicillin, streptomycin, L-glutamine, and 2-ME. B cells were cultured at 4 x 104 per well in 96-well plates at a 200 µl final volume. The following reagents alone or in combination were added for activation: LPS (Difco, Detroit, MI) at 40 µg/ml; murine rIL-4 (provided by Dr. Charles Maliszewski, Immunex) at 100 U/ml or 1000 U/ml for proliferation and Ig secretion, respectively; murine rIL-5 at 10 ng/ml (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN); and soluble rCD40L trimer (provided by Dr. William Fanslow, Immunex) at 200 ng/ml. TRFK 5 (20), a rat IgG anti-mouse IL-5, and MR1, a hamster IgG anti-mouse CD40L (provided by Dr. Randolph Noelle, Dartmouth Medical Center, Lebanon, NH), were used at a concentration of 50 µg/ml. B cell proliferation was measured after 3 days by pulsing with [3H]thymidine during the last 4 h of culture. To quantitate levels of Ig secretion, culture supernatants were collected after 6 days of incubation and tested by isotype-specific ELISA. For activation of B cell subsets with intact Th cells, B cells were seeded at a density of 4 x 104 per well in 96-well plates precoated with 145-2C11, a hamster IgG anti-mouse CD3, at 20 µg/ml. T cells were resuspended at 20 x 106 per ml in sterile PBS and incubated with mitomycin C (Sigma) at 50 µg/ml for 20 min at 37°C to prevent DNA synthesis. T cells were washed three times with sterile BSS and cocultured with B cells at 4 x 104 per well (1:1 ratio). Preliminary titration experiments demonstrated 4 x 104 B cells and T cells to be optimal for B cell activation.
Th clones
CDC35, an I-Ad-restricted Th2 clone
specific for rabbit
globulin (21), served as a
prototypic Th2 cell line. KO-1, KO-12, KO-18, and WT-25 are
H-2d-alloreactive Th2 clones generated in our
laboratory. KO-1, KO-12, and KO-18 are clones derived from a
CD40L-deficient ((129 x C57BL/6) x
C57BL/6)F2 mouse, and WT-25 was derived from a
wild-type C57BL/6 mouse. Briefly, CD40L-deficient or wild-type
splenocytes were bulk cultured with irradiated DBA/2
(H-2d) splenocytes in the presence of IL-4 and
IL-10 (PeproTech, Rocky Hill, NJ). Following 1 wk of culture, the
responding cells were plated at limiting dilution and restimulated with
DBA/2 splenocytes, cytokines, and 10 µg/ml of the agonistic
anti-CD40 mAb 1C10. The latter reagent was added to induce
appropriate costimulatory activity in the feeder cells. Clonal wells
containing CD4+ Th cells were expanded, and
cytokine secretion profiles were assessed. Upon activation with
anti-CD3, KO-1, KO-12, KO-18, and WT-25 secrete >245, 10, 10, and
>127 ng/ml of IL-4, respectively, and 23, 12, 7, and 19 ng/ml of
IL-10, respectively. Neither IL-2 nor IFN-
secretion was detected
from any of the clones. All activated clones express CD25, whereas only
the wild-type clone displays CD40L (data not shown). Clones were
maintained by periodic stimulation with irradiated
H-2d splenocytes and IL-2. T cell clones used in
all experiments were harvested 2 wk after their last stimulation. At
this time point, T cells were in a resting phase, as measured by
morphologic, cytokine, and activation marker analysis (data not
shown).
| Results |
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In an effort to study TD activation of B cells in a polyclonal
manner, soluble rCD40L trimer in the absence or presence of cytokines,
and anti-CD3-activated Th2 clones were used. This study assessed
the response of CD23-defined murine splenic and peritoneal B cell
subsets (3) to these CD40-directed stimuli. CD23 positive
(follicular) and negative (marginal zone) C3H/Hen splenic B cells, and
CD23 positive (B2) and negative (B1) BALB/c peritoneal cavity B cells
were sort purified after staining with anti-B220 and anti-CD23
mAb. C3H/Hen mice were chosen as a source of splenocytes, as this
strain has a high frequency of marginal zone B cells (4, 7). Although the
B220+CD23- splenic subset
contains immature as well as marginal zone B cells, the former is only
a minor constituent of this population (7). BALB/c mice
were used for isolating peritoneal B cell subsets because of the
relatively high proportion of B1 B cells (10). Fig. 1
shows representative pre- and postsort
contour plots, and indicates the gating strategies used for sorting
B220+CD23+ and
B220+CD23- B cell subsets.
The first series of experiments examined the proliferative response of
sort-purified B cell subsets when stimulated with rCD40L trimer.
Sort-purified B cells were cultured for 72 h with rCD40L in the
absence or presence of IL-4. B cell proliferation was measured by
[3H]thymidine incorporation during the last
4 h of culture. Fig. 2
A
demonstrates splenic follicular and marginal zone B cells to
proliferate when stimulated with soluble rCD40L. Peritoneal B2 B cells
(Fig. 2
B) likewise proliferate in response to rCD40L. In
contrast, B1 B cells weakly respond to rCD40L, showing levels of
proliferation
2050% of that observed with B2 B cells. The poor
ability of B1 B cells to proliferate when stimulated with rCD40L is
even more apparent when IL-4 is present. Previous reports have
demonstrated an enhancing role of IL-4 in CD40-directed murine B cell
stimulation (9, 19, 22, 23, 24). This is again observed in the
present experiments, in which the combination of rCD40L and IL-4
markedly enhances the levels of proliferation in follicular and
marginal zone B cell subsets (Fig. 2
A) as well as peritoneal
B2 B cells (Fig. 2
B). Although addition of IL-4 to B1 B
cells stimulated with rCD40L enhances proliferation, the presence of
both stimuli consistently results in a response that is still
20%
of that observed with B2 B cells. Thus, when stimulated with rCD40L,
splenic follicular and marginal zone as well as peritoneal B2 B cells
respond vigorously, while B1 B cells demonstrate a modest response.
This indicates that B1 B cells have a suboptimal mitogenic response to
CD40 engagement, a deficit not overcome by the addition of IL-4. It is
important to note that the altered response of B1 B cells is not due to
the Abs used for sort purification, as cells enriched by negative
selection respond similarly (data not shown). Also, preliminary
experiments determined all B cell subsets to register their greatest
response at 72 h, indicating that differential kinetics cannot
account for the findings (data not shown).
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When stimulated with rCD40L and IL-4, splenic follicular and
marginal zone B cells, as well as peritoneal B2 B cells vigorously
proliferate, while B1 B cells demonstrate a suboptimal response.
Because the use of rCD40L and IL-4 mimics Th2 conditions, we further
tested the capacity of the four B cell subsets to proliferate when
stimulated with anti-CD3-activated Th2 cells. Therefore,
sort-purified B cells were cocultured with mitomycin C-treated CDC35
Th2 cells in the presence of solid-phase anti-CD3 for 72 h. B
cell proliferation was assessed via
[3H]thymidine incorporation during the last
4 h of culture. Results shown in Fig. 2
demonstrate that similar
to stimulation with rCD40L plus IL-4, both splenic B cell subsets
(C) and peritoneal B2 B cells (D) strongly
proliferate in response to activated CDC35 cells. Interestingly,
peritoneal B1 cells exhibit proliferation equivalent to that observed
with B2 B cells (Fig. 2
D). This finding is unexpected given
the results with rCD40L, and suggests that intact Th2 cells may provide
an additional signal required for optimal B1 B cell stimulation.
Control cultures set up in the absence of plate-bound anti-CD3
showed the requirement for T cell activation to observe B cell
proliferation.
Expression of CD40 on peritoneal B cell subsets
Whereas Th2 cells induce strong proliferation in B1 B cells,
rCD40L and IL-4 support only modest expansion. Although the difference
in results may rest with an additional signal supplied by the Th cells,
it is also possible that B1 B cells express lower levels of CD40,
making it more difficult for soluble rCD40L, as opposed to cell surface
CD40L, to cluster a sufficient number of CD40 molecules. This
possibility was ruled out by simply documenting CD40 expression levels
using three-color flow cytometry. Freshly obtained peritoneal B cells
were stained with anti-CD40, anti-IgM, and anti-CD5 Abs,
followed by analysis. Fig. 3
clearly
shows B1a B cells (IgMhigh,
CD5+; population A), B1b B cells
(IgMhigh, CD5-; population
B), and B2 B cells (IgMlow,
CD5-; population C) to exhibit uniform positive
staining. Splenic B cells show similar levels of CD40 expression (data
not shown). This suggests that an additional factor supplied by Th2
cells accounts for their ability to optimally stimulate B1 B cells.
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Previous in vitro studies with murine B cells have demonstrated
CD40 agonists to induce Ig secretion, and in the presence of IL-4,
isotype switching (23, 24, 25, 26, 27). Based on these observations,
we sought to examine the ability of sort-purified B cell subsets to
undergo Ig secretion and switching when stimulated with rCD40L in the
absence or presence of IL-4. Sort-purified B cells were cultured for 6
days with the designated stimuli, and culture supernatants subsequently
assayed for IgM and IgG1 using isotype-specific ELISA. Table I
lists two experiments and summarizes
the levels of Ig secretion from the four CD23-defined B cell
populations. The results demonstrate that splenic follicular and
marginal zone B cells secrete large amounts of IgM when cultured with
rCD40L alone, and significantly higher levels with the addition of
IL-4. Although isotype switching to IgG1 is minimal in cultures with
rCD40L alone, follicular and marginal zone B cells exhibit a dramatic
rise in secreted IgG1 in parallel cultures containing both rCD40L and
IL-4. Peritoneal B2 B cells respond similarly to splenic B cells in
that they are fully capable of IgM secretion and switching to IgG1 when
cultured under the same conditions. Surprisingly, B1 B cells are also
capable of producing Ig levels comparable with the other B cell subsets
when cultured with rCD40L in the absence or presence of IL-4. Thus,
while B1 B cells proliferate suboptimally compared with follicular,
marginal zone, and B2 B cells, they are fully capable of
differentiating and switching under the conditions used. Also listed in
Table I
are results using LPS plus IL-4 as positive control. This
combination elicits IgM and IgG1 responses that are similar to those
using rCD40L and IL-4.
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Because B1 B cells are fully capable of differentiation and
isotype switching in response to rCD40L and IL-4 (Table I
), it was
anticipated that this subset would likewise secrete IgM and IgG1 when
challenged with activated Th2 cells. Sort-purified peritoneal B1 and B2
B cells were cultured with mitomycin C-treated and
anti-CD3-activated CDC35 cells for 6 days. Table II
depicts two experiments, which
demonstrate both peritoneal B cell subsets to be fully capable of IgM
production and switching to IgG1. In data not shown, sort-purified
follicular and marginal zone B cells also demonstrate excellent IgM and
IgG1 secretion when cultured with activated Th2 cells. Thus, as
expected, B1 B cells demonstrate a differentiative potential equal to
that of the other subsets. In some experiments, LPS and IL-4 were again
used as positive control.
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Should Th2 cells be providing an additional stimulus necessary for
optimal B1 B cell activation, the question arises as to whether this
signal is a cell surface or secreted factor. It is also important to
understand whether this additional factor works in conjunction with or
is independent of CD40-CD40L interactions. To distinguish between these
possibilities, sort-purified B1 B cells were cultured with CDC35 Th2
cells in anti-CD3-coated wells alone, or in the presence of
neutralizing Abs to CD40L and/or IL-5. If B1 B cells use stimuli for
proliferation that are independent of CD40-CD40L interactions, then
blockade of CD40L should still allow for significant expansion. The
results of such an experiment are shown in Fig. 4
A, and indicate that blockade
with anti-CD40L mAb only modestly affects the proliferative
response of B1 B cells. The same experiment with conventional B cells
results in a marked loss of B cell proliferative activity (data not
shown). This suggests that B1 B cell expansion can be driven by
Th2-derived factors independently of CD40 ligation. Fig. 4
A
also shows the blocking effect of anti-IL-5 mAb. An Ab to IL-5 was
chosen because previous reports demonstrated B1 B cells to
constitutively express IL-5R, and to preferentially respond to this
cytokine in vitro (28, 29, 30, 31, 32). Fig. 4
A illustrates
that, similar to CD40L blockade, neutralization of IL-5 results in only
a modest inhibition of CDC35-driven B1 B cell proliferation. Thus,
although IL-5 may support expansion of the B1 subset, it appears not to
be a limiting factor in this system. Of interest, the addition of both
anti-CD40L and IL-5 mAbs to Th2-driven B1 B cell cultures results
in a marked loss of proliferative activity (Fig. 4
A). Taken
together, these observations suggest that CD40 ligation and IL-5 are
required for optimal B1 B cell expansion. However, if either of these
two elements is unavailable, B1 B cells are still capable of
proliferating in the presence of activated Th2 cells. This further
suggests that CD40 engagement and IL-5 can independently induce B1 B
cell proliferation in the presence of another stimulus, albeit to a
lesser extent. As demonstrated in Fig. 2
, rCD40L and IL-4 are capable
of inducing modest levels of B1 B cell expansion, suggesting IL-4 to be
this third element.
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To further explore the possibility that B1 B cells can respond to
activated Th2 cells in the absence of CD40-CD40L interactions,
sort-purified B1 B cells were cultured with CD40L-deficient Th2 clones
in anti-CD3-coated wells. CD40L-deficient
H-2d alloreactive Th2 clones (KO-12, KO-18) were
generated from CD40L-/- splenocytes, as
described in Materials and Methods. A wild-type clone
(WT-25) was similarly derived from a normal C57BL/6 mouse. As shown in
Fig. 4
B, purified B1 B cells proliferate optimally in the
presence of an activated wild-type Th2 clone. These B cells also expand
in the presence of activated CD40L-deficient Th2 clones, although to a
reduced extent. In all groups (Fig. 4
B), optimal amounts of
IL-4 were added to normalize for various secretion levels of this
cytokine. Consistent with Fig. 4
A, elimination of both CD40L
and IL-5, by addition of an anti-IL-5 Ab to wells containing KO-12
and B cells, completely abrogates the response. This set of experiments
again indicates that both CD40L and IL-5 are required for optimal B1 B
cell expansion. When only one of these signals is present, modest B1 B
cell proliferation can still occur if another factor, likely to be
IL-4, is present. In data not shown, conventional B cells failed to
exhibit any proliferative response when cultured with
anti-CD3-treated CD40L-deficient Th2 clones.
Direct effects of IL-4, IL-5, and CD40L on B1 and conventional B cell proliferation
The data with both wild-type and CD40L-deficient clones (Fig. 4
)
suggest B1 B cells to require IL-5 and CD40 ligation for optimal
proliferation. Furthermore, should either be lacking, B1 B cells can
still expand in the presumed presence of IL-4. To confirm this
hypothesis, sort-purified B1 B cells were cultured with combinations of
IL-4 and IL-5 either in the absence or presence of rCD40L. Purified
splenic B cells were used as a source of conventional B cells for
comparison, with results shown in Fig. 5
.
As predicted, B1 B cells cultured with IL-4 and IL-5 in the absence of
rCD40L proliferate to a modest but significant extent. None of the
cytokine combinations induce proliferation in conventional B cells in
the absence of CD40 ligation. Upon addition of rCD40L, conventional
splenic B cells expand maximally in the presence of IL-4 and
suboptimally with IL-5. The converse is true with B1 B cells, in which
IL-5 induces optimal proliferation, and similar to Fig. 2
B,
IL-4 provides only modest costimulation. The addition of both IL-4 and
IL-5 does not enhance the response of either the conventional or B1 B
cell groups. It is thus clear that B1 B cells use IL-5 and CD40L for
maximal proliferation during Th2-directed stimulation. Moreover, IL-4
and CD40L, or IL-4 and IL-5 are capable of promoting B1 B cell
stimulation, although to a lesser extent. Thus, B1 B cells have several
options for undergoing expansion, including a CD40-independent
means.
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Because B1 B cells are capable of proliferating in the absence of
CD40-CD40L interactions, the question arises as to their ability to
differentiate in a CD40-independent manner. Tables I
and II
already
demonstrate B1 B cells to differentiate and switch comparable with
follicular, marginal zone, and B2 B cells. Therefore, sort-purified B1
B cells were incubated for 6 days with mitomycin C-treated wild-type
(CDC35 or WT-25) or CD40L-deficient (KO-1, KO-12) Th2 clones in
anti-CD3-coated wells, and culture supernatants subsequently
assayed for total IgM and IgG1 using isotype-specific ELISA. Optimal
concentrations of IL-4 were again added to normalize for possible
differences in secreted levels of this cytokine. The results in Table III
show that B1 B cells do indeed
secrete IgM and isotype switch when cultured with activated
CD40L-deficient T cells, indicating their ability to differentiate
independent of CD40 ligation. In data not shown, conventional B cells
fail to differentiate when similarly cultured with CD40L-deficient Th2
clones.
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The capacity of CD40L-deficient T cells to promote B1 B cell
differentiation suggests a role for IL-4 and IL-5 in compensating for
the lack of a CD40 agonist, similar to that observed for proliferative
responses. Therefore, purified B1 B cells were incubated for 6 days
with combinations of IL-4, IL-5, and rCD40L trimer, and culture
supernatants assayed by ELISA. Consistent with data obtained with
proliferative readouts (Fig. 5
), Table IV
shows that B1 B cells optimally differentiate and isotype switch in the
presence of rCD40L and IL-5. In addition, this subset produces
significant levels of both IgM and IgG1 in the presence of either
rCD40L and IL-4 (similar to results in Table I
) or IL-4 and IL-5. Lower
levels of secreted IgM are also present when B1 B cells are incubated
with rCD40L or IL-5 alone. Thus, whether scoring for proliferation or
differentiation, B1 B cells require both CD40 ligation and IL-5 for
optimal activation when undergoing a TD response. In the absence of
CD40-CD40L interactions, these B cells can still respond to a
significant extent if IL-4 and IL-5 are present.
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| Discussion |
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In previous studies using murine B cells, investigators demonstrated TD
activation to be CD40-CD40L restricted and optimally use IL-4 (reviewed
in Refs. 1 and 2). This is perhaps not
surprising because most B cell biologists working in the mouse
routinely use splenic B cells, of which follicular B cells comprise the
majority, and marginal zone B cells a minority (7).
Although it is understood that follicular B cells contribute to TD
responses and germinal center reactions, the finding that marginal zone
B cells share the same TD activation requirements suggests this latter
population to be capable of similar functions. The observation that
follicular and marginal zone B cells respond strongly to CD40-dependent
stimulation is consistent with the work of Snapper and coworkers
(8), who examined differentiation and switching in
response to activated Th2 clones, and Oliver et al. (9),
who tested the proliferative response to an agonistic anti-CD40 Ab.
In the latter study, marginal zone B cells responded quantitatively
better than follicular B cells, a result not observed in our
experiments (Fig. 2
). The reason for the difference is not apparent,
although different CD40 agonists and means of enriching for marginal
zone B cells were used.
Compared with conventional and marginal zone B cells, B1 B cells
proliferate suboptimally when treated with rCD40L or rCD40L and IL-4.
The poor response of B1 B cells to CD40 ligation is consistent with the
inability of this population to proliferate when cultured with
anti-IgM (10, 11, 12, 13) or anti-CD38 (13)
Abs. The reason for the poor response of B1 B cells is not readily
apparent, but may be linked to the altered intracellular status of
these cells. Compared with conventional B cells, Rothstein and
colleagues (11, 14, 15, 16) demonstrated B1 B cells to exhibit
constitutively heightened levels of activated protein kinase C and
nuclear STAT3, and to have diminished activation of phospholipase
C-
2 and NF-
B subsequent to IgM ligation. The latter finding may
be relevant to the present results, because NF-
B is activated upon
CD40 engagement (33, 34, 35) and is required for optimal
CD40-driven expansion (36, 37).
The question also arises as to how B1 B cells are capable of normal
differentiation in response to rCD40L + IL-4 when their proliferative
response is muted. Based on the work of several investigators, it is
apparent that different regions of the CD40 cytoplasmic tail are
capable of initiating distinct functions (34, 38, 39, 40). In
particular, studies by Bishop and coworkers have demonstrated that
CD40-induced up-regulation of B7, CD23, and Fas, and homotypic adhesion
map to one part of the cytoplasmic tail, NF-
B activation and Ab
secretion to a second, and IL-6 secretion to yet a third. It is thus
possible that proliferation and differentiation are likewise initiated
by distinct regions of the CD40 cytoplasmic tail, and those elements
necessary for CD40-induced proliferation are limiting in B1 B cells,
whereas those central for differentiation are not. The present results
also imply that signaling components necessary for IL-5-driven
expansion are readily available in B1 B cells, and can compensate for
the modest proliferative signals initiated by CD40 ligation.
The suboptimal proliferative response of B1 B cells to CD40 ligation is consistent with the reports of Bikah et al. (12) and Lund et al. (13), who found this population to exhibit a lower response to CD40 stimulation compared with splenic B cells. The difference between the B1 and conventional populations was not as great in these reports as observed in the present study, and might be explained by a different agonist (anti-CD40 Ab) and the use of only semipurified splenic B cells. In contrast, Shirai and coworkers (18) reported that B1 and B2 B cells sort purified from the spleens of autoimmune (NZB x NZW)F1 mice exhibited equivalent levels of proliferation when stimulated with an anti-CD40 Ab in the presence of IL-4 and/or IL-5. The differing results may be explained not only by a different agonist, but the intrinsic hyperresponsiveness of autoimmune B cells (41). It is of interest that, similar to normal BALB/c B1 B cells, B1 B cells sort purified from the peritoneal cavity of NZB mice show a poor response to rCD40L alone or in the presence of IL-4, but respond vigorously upon culture with rCD40L and IL-5 (L. D. E. and T. J. W., data not shown). The present data are also in partial agreement with the study of Tarlinton et al. (17), who demonstrated B1 and B2 B cells to produce IgM and switch to IgG1 when stimulated with CD40L-transfected fibroblasts, IL-4, and IL-5. This study further showed that the frequency of IgG1-switched cells was much lower in the B1 population compared with both splenic and peritoneal conventional B cells. This is at odds with the present findings, in which equivalent amounts of IgG1 are produced by B1 and B2 cells whether stimulating with rCD40L and cytokines or intact activated Th2 clones. Reasons for the differing results are unclear, although different readouts were used (total IgG vs precursor frequency) in the two studies. Finally, previous experiments demonstrating the capacity of adoptively transferred B1 B cells to produce IgM and IgG in response to challenge with a TD Ag are consistent with the present observations (42, 43).
The finding that IL-5 is central in Th2-driven B1 B cell activation confirms and extends a number of studies suggesting a unique role for IL-5 in B1 B cell activation. Previous reports have demonstrated the B1 B cell subset to constitutively express IL-5R (31, 32), and to exhibit modest levels of proliferation and differentiation when treated with this cytokine (28, 29, 30, 31, 32). IL-5 has also been shown to preferentially enhance the proliferative response of B1 B cells treated with LPS or dextran sulfate (28, 29, 30). In addition, studies with IL-5 transgenic and knockout mice have demonstrated a key role for this cytokine in the development and maintenance of the B1 B cell population (44, 45, 46). Therefore, it appears that the B1 B cell subset is programmed to preferentially use this cytokine not only for its maintenance, but for cognate encounters with Th cells.
In addition to its role in CD40-directed stimulation of B1 B cells, IL-5 is able to stimulate this subset in the absence of CD40-CD40L interactions. When present with IL-4, IL-5 induces proliferation, differentiation, and isotype switching of B1 cells. This result is of particular interest when examining the humoral response to protein Ags in both CD40L- and CD40-deficient mice (47, 48, 49), as well as in X-HIM patients (50). Although germinal centers and a significant portion of the isotype-switched response are absent in mice or humans with CD40 or CD40L mutations, Abs, primarily of the IgM class, are still induced. It is thus possible that in the absence of CD40-CD40L interactions, these protein-specific Ab responses arise from Th2 cytokine-stimulated B1 B cells.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 Current address: Department of Microbiology, Dartmouth Medical Center, 1 Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, NH. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Thomas J. Waldschmidt, Department of Pathology, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242. ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: TD, T cell-dependent; BSS, balanced salt solution; L, ligand; TI, T cell-independent; TNP, 2,4,6-trinitrophenyl. ![]()
Received for publication January 27, 2000. Accepted for publication October 31, 2000.
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