CD45RO enriches for activated, highly mutated human germinal center B cells

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Abstract

To date, there is no consensus regarding the influence of different CD45 isoforms during peripheral B-cell development. Examining correlations between surface CD45RO expression and various physiologic processes ongoing during the germinal center (GC) reaction, we hypothesized that GC B cells, like T cells, that up-regulate surface RO should progressively acquire phenotypes commonly associated with activated, differentiating lymphocytes. GC B cells (IgD -CD38+) were subdivided into 3 surface CD45RO fractions: RO-, RO+/-, and RO+. We show here that the average number of mutations per IgVH transcript increased in direct correlation with surface RO levels. Conjunctional use of RO and CD69 further delineated low/moderately and highly mutated fractions. Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) mRNA was slightly reduced among RO+ GC B cells, suggesting that higher mutation averages are unlikely due to elevated somatic mutation activity. Instead, RO+ GC B cells were negative for Annexin V, comprised mostly (93%) of CD77- centrocytes, and were enriched for CD69+ cells. Collectively, RO + GC B cells occupy what seems to be a specialized niche comprised mostly of centrocytes that may be in transition between activation states. These findings are among the first to sort GC B cells into populations enriched for live mutated cells solely using a single extracellular marker. © 2007 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Jackson, S. M., Harp, N., Patel, D., Zhang, J., Willson, S., Kim, Y. J., … Capra, J. D. (2007). CD45RO enriches for activated, highly mutated human germinal center B cells. Blood, 110(12), 3917–3925. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2007-05-087767

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