Neisseria lactamica is a commensal bacteria that colonizes the human upper respiratory tract mucosa during early childhood. In contrast to the closely related opportunistic pathogen Neisseria meningitidis, there is an absence of adaptive cell-mediated immunity to N. lactamica during the peak age of carriage. Instead, outer membrane vesicles derived from N. lactamica mediate a B cell-dependent proliferative response in mucosal mononuclear cells that is associated with the production of polyclonal IgM. We demonstrate in this study that this is a mitogenic human B cell response that occurs independently of T cell help and any other accessory cell population. The ability to drive B cell proliferation is a highly conserved property and is present in N. lactamica strains derived from diverse clonal complexes. CFSE staining of purified human tonsillar B cells demonstrated that naive IgD+ and CD27− B cells are selectively induced to proliferate by outer membrane vesicles, including the innate CD5+ subset. Neither purified lipooligosaccharide nor PorB from N. lactamica is likely to be responsible for this activity. Prior treatment of B cells with pronase to remove cell-surface Ig or treatment with BCR-specific Abs abrogated the proliferative response to N. lactamica outer membrane vesicles, suggesting that this mitogenic response is dependent upon the BCR.
CITATION STYLE
Vaughan, A. T., Brackenbury, L. S., Massari, P., Davenport, V., Gorringe, A., Heyderman, R. S., & Williams, N. A. (2010). Neisseria lactamica Selectively Induces Mitogenic Proliferation of the Naive B Cell Pool via Cell Surface Ig. The Journal of Immunology, 185(6), 3652–3660. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0902468
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