In senescence, age-associated b cells secrete tnfα and inhibit survival of b-cell precursors

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Abstract

Aged mice exhibit ~ 5-10-fold increases in an ordinarily minor CD21/35- CD23- mature B-cell subset termed age-associated B cells (ABCs). ABCs from old, but not young, mice induce apoptosis in pro-B cells directly through secretion of TNFα. In addition, aged ABCs, via TNF, stimulate bone marrow cells to suppress pro-Bcell growth. ABC effects can be prevented by the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10. Notably, CD21/35+ CD23+ follicular (FO) splenic and FO-like recirculating bone marrow B cells in both young and aged mice contain a subpopulation that produces IL-10. Unlike young adult FO B cells, old FO B cells also produce TNFα; however, secretion of IL-10 within this B-cell population ameliorates the TNFα-mediated effects on B-cell precursors. Loss of B-cell precursors in the bone marrow of old mice in vivo was significantly associated with increased ABC relative to recirculating FO-like B cells. Adoptive transfer of aged ABC into RAG-2 KO recipients resulted in significant losses of pro-B cells within the bone marrow. These results suggest that alterations in B-cell composition during old age, in particular, the increase in ABC within the B-cell compartments, contribute to a pro-inflammatory environment within the bone marrow. This provides a mechanism of inappropriate B-cell 'feedback' that promotes downregulation of B lymphopoiesis in old age. © 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/Anatomical Society.

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Ratliff, M., Alter, S., Frasca, D., Blomberg, B. B., & Riley, R. L. (2013). In senescence, age-associated b cells secrete tnfα and inhibit survival of b-cell precursors. Aging Cell, 12(2), 303–311. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.12055

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