Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Cellular Basis of B Cell Clonal Populations in Old Mice

1999; American Association of Immunologists; Volume: 162; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.4049/jimmunol.162.11.6384

ISSN

1550-6606

Autores

Joël LeMaoult, John S. Manavalan, Ruben Dyall, Paul Szabo, Janko Nikolić‐Žugić, Marc E. Weksler,

Tópico(s)

Immune Cell Function and Interaction

Resumo

Previous studies from this laboratory have shown that >85% of old mice have stable B cell clonal populations detectable by Ig heavy chain complementary-determining region 3 mRNA size analysis and confirmed by sequence analysis. B cells from the same clone are frequently detected in several lymphoid compartments of the same mouse. We now report the phenotype of all ten stable B cell clonal populations detected in five 20-month-old C57BL/6 mice. These clonal B cells appear to develop in the periphery and nine of the ten B cell clonal populations expressed the CD5 cell surface marker. Stable B cell expansions may be dominated by cells at two stages of differentiation. Some B cell populations were detected with DNA as well as RNA and represent large clonal populations of B cells, detectable in several lymphoid compartments. These populations are found predominantly in B cell populations expressing CD45R/B220 and the mRNA coding for the membrane-bound form of the mu Ig heavy chain, which suggests a predominance of B lymphocytes in these populations. In other cases, smaller clonal populations were detected only in splenic RNA samples. These clonal populations were found predominantly among CD45R/B220- B cells and did not express the membrane-bound form of the micro Ig heavy chain. We offer the hypothesis that the B cell clonal populations present in old mice may be precursors of the two types of B cell neoplasms which are dominated by CD5+ B cells (B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia) or plasma cells (multiple myeloma).

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