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Title: Frequent detection of thyroid peroxidase-specific IgG+ memory B cells in blood of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. Author: Leyendeckers H, Voth E, Schicha H, Hunzelmann N, Banga P, Schmitz J. Journal: Eur J Immunol; 2002 Nov; 32(11):3126-32. PubMed ID: 12385033. Abstract: Centrocytes in germinal centers on selection differentiate into plasma cells and/or memory B cells. Cells that have acquired autoreactivity by somatic mutation generally fail to undergo positive selection and die by apoptosis. Presence of isotype-switched high-affinity autoantibodies in serum of autoimmune patients suggests that autoreactive plasma cells eventually emerge from a germinal center reaction. Currently, it is still unclear to which extent the same is true for autoreactive memory B cells. To address this question, we have analyzed whether IgG-bearing memory B cells with specificity for thyroid peroxidase (TPO) can be found in blood of patients with autoimmune thyroid disease and in normal blood donors. Autoreactive TPO-specific IgG+ memory B cells were identified using a previously described assay combining two-step immunomagnetic enrichment with flow cytometric detection. Autoreactive IgG+ memory B cells were found in 65% of the patients with autoimmune thyroid disease and in 17% of normal blood donors; 40% of the latter had no detectable TPO-specific IgG in the serum. The specificity of enriched TPO-specific IgG+ memory B cells was confirmed by in vitro proliferation and differentiation into antibody-secreting cells at limiting dilution and analysis of the supernatants for the presence of TPO-specific IgG. Detection of TPO-specific IgG+ memory B cells in most patients with clinically manifested autoimmune thyroid disease and few normal blood donors may argue for a role of circulating memory B cells in onset of disease.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]