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Title: Lipopolysaccharide-stimulated events in B cell activation. Author: Hu H, Möller G. Journal: Scand J Immunol; 1994 Aug; 40(2):221-7. PubMed ID: 8047845. Abstract: High concentrations of thymus-independent (TI) antigens are capable of inducing polyclonal B cell activation by their intrinsic mitogenic properties, irrespective of the specificity of the Ig receptors. Due to a genetic defect on the 4th chromosome, B cells from C3H/HeJ mice do not respond to lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In order to define at which step the mutation affects the signalling pathway, we compared B cells from C3H/HeJ and CBA mice with regard to changes of three events, namely cell size, and MHC class I and II antigen expression after LPS stimulation. We found that cell size and expression of MHC antigens increase in B cells from CBA mice after LPS stimulation, whereas B cells from C3H/HeJ mice do not respond at all. This suggests that the defect in C3H/HeJ mice interferes with early events in the signalling pathway, either due to the absence of a LPS receptor on B cell surface or the lack of an initial component necessary for effective signal transmission subsequent to LPS receptor binding. Our results also have shown that stimulation of anti-Ig antibodies and LPS differ in some signalling events and have different final effects on B cells, which suggests that they may function differently via distinct signalling pathways.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]