Abstract
Studies on human B cells have featured CD27 as a marker and mediator of the B cell response. We have studied CD27 expression and function on B cells in the mouse. We find that B cells acquire CD27 at the centroblast stage and lose it progressively upon further differentiation. It is not a marker for somatically mutated B cells and is present at very low frequency on memory B cells. Enrichment of CD27 among centroblasts and the presence of its ligand CD70 on occasional T and B cells in or near germinal centers (GCs) suggested a role for CD27/CD70 interactions in clonal B cell expansion. Accordingly, GC formation in response to influenza virus infection was delayed in CD27 knockout mice. CD27 deficiency did not affect somatic hypermutation or serum levels of virus-specific IgM, IgG, and IgA attained in primary and recall responses. Adoptive transfer of T and B cells into CD27/CD28−/− mice revealed that CD27 promotes GC formation and consequent IgG production by two distinct mechanisms. Stimulation of CD27 on B cells by CD28+ Th cells accelerates GC formation, most likely by promoting centroblast expansion. In addition, CD27 on T cells can partially substitute for CD28 in supporting GC formation.
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CITATION STYLE
Xiao, Y., Hendriks, J., Langerak, P., Jacobs, H., & Borst, J. (2004). CD27 Is Acquired by Primed B Cells at the Centroblast Stage and Promotes Germinal Center Formation. The Journal of Immunology, 172(12), 7432–7441. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.172.12.7432
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