Cutting Edge: An In Vivo Reporter Reveals Active B Cell Receptor Signaling in the Germinal Center

  • Mueller J
  • Matloubian M
  • Zikherman J
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Abstract

Long-lasting Ab responses rely on the germinal center (GC), where B cells bearing high-affinity Ag receptors are selected from a randomly mutated pool to populate the memory and plasma cell compartments. Signaling downstream of the BCR is dampened in GC B cells, raising the possibility that Ag presentation and competition for T cell help, rather than Ag-dependent signaling per se, drive these critical selection events. In this study we use an in vivo reporter of BCR signaling, Nur77-eGFP, to demonstrate that although BCR signaling is reduced among GC B cells, a small population of cells exhibiting GC light zone phenotype (site of Ag and follicular helper T cell encounter) express much higher levels of GFP. We show that these cells exhibit somatic hypermutation, gene expression characteristic of signaling and selection, and undergo BCR signaling in vivo.

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Mueller, J., Matloubian, M., & Zikherman, J. (2015). Cutting Edge: An In Vivo Reporter Reveals Active B Cell Receptor Signaling in the Germinal Center. The Journal of Immunology, 194(7), 2993–2997. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1403086

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