Differential organization of tonic and chronic B cell antigen receptors in the plasma membrane

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Abstract

Stimulation of the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) triggers signaling pathways that promote the differentiation of B cells into plasma cells. Despite the pivotal function of BCR in B cell activation, the organization of the BCR on the surface of resting and antigen-activated B cells remains unclear. Here we show, using STED super-resolution microscopy, that IgM-containing BCRs exist predominantly as monomers and dimers in the plasma membrane of resting B cells, but form higher oligomeric clusters upon stimulation. By contrast, a chronic lymphocytic leukemia-derived BCR forms dimers and oligomers in the absence of a stimulus, but a single amino acid exchange reverts its organization to monomers in unstimulated B cells. Our super-resolution microscopy approach for quantitatively analyzing cell surface proteins may thus help reveal the nanoscale organization of immunoreceptors in various cell types.

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Gomes de Castro, M. A., Wildhagen, H., Sograte-Idrissi, S., Hitzing, C., Binder, M., Trepel, M., … Opazo, F. (2019). Differential organization of tonic and chronic B cell antigen receptors in the plasma membrane. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-08677-1

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