These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: B-1 cells in systemic autoimmune responses: IgM+, Fc epsilon Rdull B cells are lost during chronic graft-versus-host disease but not in murine AIDS or collagen-induced arthritis.
    Author: Iciek LA, Waldschmidt TJ, Griffiths MM, Brooks KH.
    Journal: Immunol Invest; 1994 Aug; 23(4-5):293-311. PubMed ID: 7525472.
    Abstract:
    The potential role of B-1 cells (i.e. the CD5+ B cell and "sister" B cell subsets) in autoimmunity is controversial. CD5+ B cells have been shown to secrete antibodies of similar specificity as those found in many systemic autoimmune diseases; in addition, increases in CD5+ B cell frequency have been reported in patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, myasthenia gravis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and Hashimoto's thyroiditis. Whether these increases are due to expansion of B-1 lineage cells in the human or due to activation-induced expression of CD5 by conventional B cells is unclear. In the present study, we used three murine models of systemic autoimmunity: murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (MAIDS), chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGvHD), and collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) to determine whether increases in B-1 cell frequency are universally seen in models of autoimmunity which are mechanistically distinct. In contrast to the aforementioned human systemic autoimmune diseases which exhibit an increase in CD5+ B cell frequency, the percentage of CD5+ B cells declined in all three murine models of systemic autoimmune disease. Even though there was a decrease in the frequency of CD5+ B cells there was no change in the actual number of CD5+ B cells. Thus, the apparent decline in CD5+ B cell frequency was due to increases in either T cells, conventional Fc epsilon R+ B cells, or both. The only actual decline in a B cell subset was the loss of IgM+, Fc epsilon Rdull cells in both the spleen and peritoneal cavity of mice undergoing a chronic graft-versus-host reaction. Therefore, our data suggests that expansion of the B-1 subset does not occur as a general feature of murine systemic autoimmune disease. These observations, consistent with previous studies of Ig gene usage in autoreactive antibodies, support the view that expansion and differentiation of the CD5+ B cell subset is not a central event leading to autoantibody production.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]