B cell development Flashcards

1
Q

What is required for pluripotent HSCs to commit to becoming a B cell?

A
  • Pluripotent HSCs express CD34 and CD43
  • Those that stay in the bone marrow express transcription factor Pax5 → differentiation into **pro-B **cells
    • Pax5 is expressed throughout the life of a B cell b/c it is needed for the transcription of many B cell genes, including Ig genes
    • If Pax5 is not expressed, CLP will become a monocyte (or later a NK cell), not a B cell.
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2
Q

What are the first steps needed to generate a B cell receptor (BCR)?

A
  • Rearrangement of Ig-µ heavy chain gene locus
    • There are two Ig-µ gene loci (one for each chromosome) → cell has two chances to execute productive VDJ recombination
    • If VDJ fails to be productive on either chromosome → cell apoptoses
    • VDJ productive/produces a heavy chain that can bind the surrogate light chain → pre-B cell
  • The generation of a µ heavy chain that is able to form a pre-B cell is the first of two B cell development checkpoints
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3
Q

What is allelic exclusion?

A
  • If **VDJ **recombination of the Ig µ heavy chain is productive with the first chromosome, subsequent rearrangement is stopped by the elimination of RAG recombinase proteins
  • This limits synthesis of the µ heavy chain to only one of the two loci and is called allelic exclusion
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4
Q

What steps are needed to generate a pre-B cell?

A
  • µ heavy chain must demonstrate capacity to bind a surrogate light chain, made up of the proteins VpreB and λ5
    • VpreB = proxy for light chain variable region
    • λ5 = proxy for light chain constant region
  • Newly synthesized µ heavy chain bound to VpreB and λ5 translocates to the cell surface along with transmb proteins Igβ and Igα → forms pre-B cell receptor → cell is now a pre-B cell
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5
Q

How is light chain synthesis completed?

A
  • Pre-B cell undergoes **proliferation **→ generates a large population of pre-B cells with the same µ heavy chain **already **paired to a surrogate light chain (VpreB and λ5
  • **RAG **gene expression is turned on → light chain undergoes VJ recombination
    • There are four light chain loci: one κ and one λ on each chromosome
    • Recombination begins with the κ gene one chromosome
      • If doesn’t work, more to κ gene on second chromosome, then λ gene
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6
Q

How is a functional IgM receptor generated?

A
  • IgM formed in the ER when a light chain is paired with a µ heavy chain
  • IgM, Igβ, and Igα move to the cell membrane → assembly Mature BCR → cessation of light chain rearrangment
  • If the cell does not produce a functional light chain → cell apoptosis
    • ​∴ capacity to make a functional IgM receptor = **second **B cell development checkpoint
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7
Q

B cell negative selection

A
  • Although B cells now have mature IgM receptors, they cannot leave th BM, since most of them are still self-reactive and must undergo negative selection first before leaving the BM
  • BM stromal cells express self-antigen → B cell monovalent and multivalent (many epitopes) sampling of self-antigens
    • **Multivalent **negative selection happens entirely in the BM
      • ​B cells that bind multivalent antigens undergo receptor editing
    • Monovalent negative selection begins in the BM, but continues in the periphery
      • ​B cells that bind self antigen → anergy
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8
Q

Receptor Editing

A
  • Before apoptosis occurs during negative selection, B cells that have recognized multivalent self-antigens have the chance to “redeem themselves”
  • They do this through a process called receptor editing in which the autoreactive B cell:
    • reduces the level of surface IgM (turns off autoreactivity)
    • upregulates RAG expression and
    • begins a new rearrangement of the light chain locus → excision of the previously expressed rearrangement → production and testing of a new rearrangment
  • Process can happen again and again until the cell either:
    • finds a receptor that lacks autoreactivity → continued B cell development - OR -
    • runs out of recombination possibilities → apoptosis via clonal deletion
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9
Q

What are the relative levels of IgD and IgM on mature BCRs?

A
  • B cells that are not self-reactive must make both IgD and IgM before they leave the BM → heavy chain mRNA splicing to produce both heavy chains
  • When a B cell leaves the BM it is not yet fully mature so has more IgM on its surface than IgD.
  • Once a B cell is fully mature it will have more IgD than IgM on its surface.
    • This is due to interactions with antigens on follicular DCs
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10
Q

What is the fate of B cells that are self-reactive against monovalent antigens?

A
  • B cells that bind these antigens are allowed to leave the BM, but they are in a state of anergy and have a short life span of 1-5 days
  • They produce very little IgM on the cell surface, ∴ they are not activated when their IgD BCR binds the self antigen
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11
Q

How is B cell maturation completed?

A
  • Completed in the **periphery **(2° lymphoid organs)
  • BM-derived B cells interact with follicular dendritic cells (FDCs; not real DCs) via two proteins on the B cell surface:
    • Lymphotoxin (Similar to TNF-α)
    • BAFF (B cell activating in the TNF family)
  • Interaction → stimulation of B cell to mature → surface IgD expression > surface IgM expression
  • B cell then reenters circulation as a mature naive B cell that can be activated by non-self antigen
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