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.
CITATION STYLE
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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