Journal
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 1818-1827Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.201242784
Keywords
B-cell subsets; CD4(+) T cells; Tolerance
Categories
Funding
- National Institutes of Health [AI070934]
- Medical Research Foundation of Oregon
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B cells are efficient APCs when they internalize antigen via BCR-mediated uptake. Adoptively transferred antigen-presenting B cells can induce T-cell tolerance to foreign and self antigens; however, it is unknown whether endogenous B cells presenting self-peptides interact with naive T cells and contribute to peripheral T-cell self-tolerance. Moreover, the relative abilities of mature B-cell subsets to induce T-cell tolerance have not been examined. To address these questions, we created a new mouse model wherein a very small fraction of B cells expresses an antigen transgene that cannot be transferred to other APCs. We limited antigen expression to follicular, marginal zone, or B-1 B-cell subsets and found that small numbers of each subset interacted with naive antigen-specific T cells. Although antigen expressed by B-1 B cells induced the most T-cell division, divided T cells subsequently disappeared from secondary lymphoid tissues. Independent of which B-cell subset presented antigen, the remaining T cells were rendered hypo-responsive, and this effect was not associated with Foxp3 expression. Our data show that physiologically relevant proportions of B cells can mediate peripheral T-cell tolerance, and suggest that the mechanisms of tolerance induction might differ among follicular, marginal zone, and B-1 B-cell subsets.
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