Differential regulation of self-reactivity discriminates between IgG + human circulating memory B cells and bone marrow plasma cells

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Abstract

Long-term humoral immunity is maintained by the formation of high-affinity class-switched memory B cells and long-lived antibody-secreting plasma cells. In healthy humans, a substantial fraction of IgG-positive memory B cells express self-reactive and polyreactive IgG antibodies that frequently develop by somatic mutations. Whether self- and polyreactive IgG-secreting B cells are also tolerated in the long-lived plasma cell pool is not known. To address this question, we cloned and expressed the Ig genes from 177 IgG-producing bone marrow plasma cells of four healthy donors. All antibodies were highly mutated but the frequency of self- and polyreactive IgG antibodies was significantly lower than that found in circulating memory B cells. The data suggest that in contrast to the development of memory B cells, entry into the bone marrow plasma cell compartment requires previously unappreciated selective regulation by mechanisms that limit the production of self- and polyreactive serum IgG antibodies.

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Scheid, J. F., Mouquet, H., Kofer, J., Yurasov, S., Nussenzweig, M. C., & Wardemann, H. (2011). Differential regulation of self-reactivity discriminates between IgG + human circulating memory B cells and bone marrow plasma cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(44), 18044–18048. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1113395108

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