Bone marrow basophils provide survival signals to immature B cells in vitro but are dispensable in vivo

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Abstract

Immature B cells are the first B cell progenitors to express a fully formed B cell receptor and are therefore subject to extensive selection processes that act to mitigate the emergence of autoreactive clones. While it is well appreciated that most B cell generation in the bone marrow is highly dependent on access to molecules present in the local milieu, the existence of extrinsically provided factors that modulate immature B cell biology is ambiguous. Nonetheless, a population of CD49b+CD90lo cells has demonstrated in vitro potential to promote immature B cell survival. Using a mouse basophil reporter strain we confirmed the identity of these CD49b+CD90lo supportive cells as basophils. However, analysis of bone marrow B cell populations following lineage specific basophil depletion demonstrates that basophils do not have a significant role in vivo in modulating immature B cell biology during steady-state conditions.

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Moreau, J. M., Cen, S., Berger, A., Furlonger, C., & Paige, C. J. (2017). Bone marrow basophils provide survival signals to immature B cells in vitro but are dispensable in vivo. PLoS ONE, 12(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0185509

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