Epstein-Barr virus immortalization of normal cells of B cell lineage with nonproductive, rearranged immunoglobulin genes.

  • Tosato G
  • Marti G
  • Yarchoan R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Most continuous cell lines derived by EBV immortalization of peripheral blood cells are composed of phenotypically mature B lymphocytes, and secrete Ig. Occasionally, EBV-immortalized cell lines have failed to secrete Ig. Expansion and characterization of one of these EBV-induced cell lines, VDS-O, showed that in addition to a lack of Ig secretion, surface and intracytoplasmic Ig were absent. Cell surface phenotyping revealed that VDS-O belongs to the B cell lineage, because it expresses the B cell restricted antigens B1 and B4, while it lacks T cell and monocyte-associated determinants. Analysis of the Ig gene organization in VDS-O revealed that the Ig genes are rearranged for both heavy (gamma) and light (kappa) chains. However, the expected gamma-heavy chain and/or kappa-light chain RNA species were not detected. These findings demonstrate the existence in normal peripheral blood of cells of B cell lineage susceptible to EBV immortalization that have Ig genes that are rearranged but are nonproductive.

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APA

Tosato, G., Marti, G. E., Yarchoan, R., Heilman, C. A., Wang, F., Pike, S. E., … Siminovitch, K. (1986). Epstein-Barr virus immortalization of normal cells of B cell lineage with nonproductive, rearranged immunoglobulin genes. The Journal of Immunology, 137(6), 2037–2042. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.137.6.2037

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