Aborted Germinal Center Reactions and B Cell Memory by Follicular T Cells Specific for a B Cell Receptor V Region Peptide

  • Heiser R
  • Snyder C
  • St. Clair J
  • et al.
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Abstract

A fundamental problem in immunoregulation is how CD4+ T cells react to immunogenic peptides derived from the V region of the BCR that are created by somatic mechanisms, presented in MHC II, and amplified to abundance by B cell clonal expansion during immunity. BCR neo Ags open a potentially dangerous avenue of T cell help in violation of the principle of linked Ag recognition. To analyze this issue, we developed a murine adoptive transfer model using paired donor B cells and CD4 T cells specific for a BCR-derived peptide. BCR peptide-specific T cells aborted ongoing germinal center reactions and impeded the secondary immune response. Instead, they induced the B cells to differentiate into short-lived extrafollicular plasmablasts that secreted modest quantities of Ig. These results uncover an immunoregulatory process that restricts the memory pathway to B cells that communicate with CD4 T cells via exogenous foreign Ag.

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Heiser, R. A., Snyder, C. M., St. Clair, J., & Wysocki, L. J. (2011). Aborted Germinal Center Reactions and B Cell Memory by Follicular T Cells Specific for a B Cell Receptor V Region Peptide. The Journal of Immunology, 187(1), 212–221. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1002328

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