Quantitative regulation of B cell division destiny by signal strength
Details
Publication Year 2008-07-01,Volume 181,Issue #1,Page 374-382
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Differentiation to Ab secreting and isotype-switched effector cells is tightly linked to cell division and therefore the degree of proliferation strongly influences the nature of the immune response. The maximum number of divisions reached, termed the population division destiny, is stochastically distributed in the population and is an important parameter in the quantitative outcome of lymphocyte responses. In this study, we further assessed the variables that regulate B cell division destiny in vitro in response to T cell- and TLR-dependent stimuli. Both the concentration and duration of stimulation were able to regulate the average maximum number of divisions undergone for each stimulus. Notably, a maximum division destiny was reached during provision of repeated saturating stimulation, revealing that an intrinsic limit to proliferation exists even under these conditions. This limit was linked directly to division number rather than time of exposure to stimulation and operated independently of the survival regulation of the cells. These results demonstrate that a B cell population's division destiny is regulable by the stimulatory conditions up to an inherent maximum value. Division destiny is a crucial parameter in regulating the extent of B cell responses and thereby also the nature of the immune response mounted.
Publisher
AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
Keywords
CD4(+) T-CELLS; CLONAL EXPANSION; ANTIGEN-RECEPTOR; PROLIFERATIVE CAPACITY; LYMPHOCYTE RESPONSES; EFFECTOR FUNCTION; TELOMERE LENGTH; DIFFERENTIATION; REQUIRE; STIMULATION
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2008-07-01 12:00:00
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙