The Recirculating B Cell Pool Contains Two Functionally Distinct, Long-Lived, Posttransitional, Follicular B Cell Populations

  • Cariappa A
  • Boboila C
  • Moran S
  • et al.
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Abstract

Disparate models for the development of peripheral B cells may reflect significant heterogeneity in recirculating long-lived B cells that have not been previously accounted for. We show in this study that the murine recirculating B cell pool contains two distinct, long-lived, posttransitional, follicular B cell populations. Follicular Type I IgMlow B cells require Ag-derived and Btk-dependent signals for their development and make up the majority of cells in the recirculating follicular B cell pool. Follicular type II B cells do not require Btk- or Notch-2-derived signals, make up about a third of the long-lived recirculating B cell pool, and can develop in the absence of Ag. These two follicular populations exhibit differences in basal tyrosine phosphorylation and in BCR-induced proliferation, suggesting that they may represent functionally distinct populations of long-lived recirculating B cells.

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Cariappa, A., Boboila, C., Moran, S. T., Liu, H., Shi, H. N., & Pillai, S. (2007). The Recirculating B Cell Pool Contains Two Functionally Distinct, Long-Lived, Posttransitional, Follicular B Cell Populations. The Journal of Immunology, 179(4), 2270–2281. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.179.4.2270

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