T Cell–B Cell Thymic Cross-Talk: Maintenance and Function of Thymic B Cells Requires Cognate CD40–CD40 Ligand Interaction

  • Fujihara C
  • Williams J
  • Watanabe M
  • et al.
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Abstract

Thymic development requires bidirectional interaction or cross-talk between developing T cells and thymic stromal cells, a relationship that has been best characterized for the interaction between thymocytes and thymic epithelial cells. We have characterized in this article the requirement for similar cross-talk in the maintenance and function of thymic B cells, another population that plays a role in selection of developing thymic T cells. We found that maintenance of thymic B cells is strongly dependent on the presence of mature single-positive thymocytes and on the interactions of these T cells with specific Ag ligand. Maintenance of thymic B cell number is strongly dependent on B cell–autonomous expression of CD40, but not MHC class II, indicating that direct engagement of CD40 on thymic B cells is necessary to support their maintenance and proliferation. Thymic B cells can mediate negative selection of superantigen-specific, self-reactive, single-positive thymocytes, and we show that CD40 expression on B cells is critical for this negative selection. Cross-talk with thymic T cells is thus required to support the thymic B cell population through a pathway that requires cell-autonomous expression of CD40, and that reciprocally functions in negative selection of autoreactive T cells.

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APA

Fujihara, C., Williams, J. A., Watanabe, M., Jeon, H., Sharrow, S. O., & Hodes, R. J. (2014). T Cell–B Cell Thymic Cross-Talk: Maintenance and Function of Thymic B Cells Requires Cognate CD40–CD40 Ligand Interaction. The Journal of Immunology, 193(11), 5534–5544. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1401655

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