Intrinsic Differences in the Proliferation of Naive and Memory Human B Cells as a Mechanism for Enhanced Secondary Immune Responses

Humoral immune responses elicited after secondary exposure to immunizing Ag are characterized by robust and elevated reactivity of memory B cells that exceed those of naive B cells during the primary response. The mechanism underlying this difference in responsiveness of naive vs memory B cells rema...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 2003-01, Vol.170 (2), p.686-694
Hauptverfasser: Tangye, Stuart G, Avery, Danielle T, Deenick, Elissa K, Hodgkin, Philip D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Humoral immune responses elicited after secondary exposure to immunizing Ag are characterized by robust and elevated reactivity of memory B cells that exceed those of naive B cells during the primary response. The mechanism underlying this difference in responsiveness of naive vs memory B cells remains unclear. We have quantitated the response of naive and memory human B cells after in vitro stimulation with T cell-derived stimuli. In response to stimulation with CD40 ligand alone or with IL-10, both IgM-expressing and Ig isotype-switched memory B cells entered their first division 20-30 h earlier than did naive B cells. In contrast, the time spent traversing subsequent divisions was similar. Consistent with previous studies, only memory cells differentiated to CD38(+) blasts in a manner that increased with consecutive division number. These differentiated CD38(+) B cells divided faster than did CD38(-) memory B cell blasts. Proliferation of CD40 ligand-stimulated naive B cells as well as both CD38(+) and CD38(-) cells present in cultures of memory B cells was increased by IL-10. In contrast, IL-2 enhanced proliferation of CD38(-) and CD38(+) memory B cell blasts, but not naive cells. Thus, memory B cells possess an intrinsic advantage over naive B cells in both the time to initiate a response and in the division-based rate of effector cell development. These differences help explain the accelerated Ab response exhibited by memory B cells after secondary challenge by an invading pathogen, a hallmark of immunological memory.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.170.2.686