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Publication : The quantity of CD40 signaling determines the differentiation of B cells into functionally distinct memory cell subsets.

First Author  Koike T Year  2019
Journal  Elife Volume  8
PubMed ID  31225793 Mgi Jnum  J:278553
Mgi Id  MGI:6355607 Doi  10.7554/eLife.44245
Citation  Koike T, et al. (2019) The quantity of CD40 signaling determines the differentiation of B cells into functionally distinct memory cell subsets. Elife 8:e44245
abstractText  In mice, memory B (Bmem) cells can be divided into two subpopulations: CD80(hi) Bmem cells, which preferentially differentiate into plasma cells; and CD80(lo) Bmem cells, which become germinal center (GC) B cells during a recall response. We demonstrate that these distinct responses can be B-cell-intrinsic and essentially independent of B-cell receptor (BCR) isotypes. Furthermore, we find that the development of CD80(hi) Bmem cells in the primary immune response requires follicular helper T cells, a relatively strong CD40 signal and a high-affinity BCR on B cells, whereas the development of CD80(lo) Bmem cells does not. Quantitative differences in CD40 stimulation were enough to recapitulate the distinct B cell fate decisions in an in vitro culture system. The quantity of CD40 signaling appears to be translated into NF-kappaB activation, followed by BATF upregulation that promotes Bmem cell differentiation from GC B cells.
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