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Publication : Reduced notch activity is associated with an impaired marginal zone B cell development and function in Sly1 mutant mice.

First Author  Scheikl T Year  2009
Journal  Mol Immunol Volume  46
Issue  5 Pages  969-77
PubMed ID  18950867 Mgi Jnum  J:145044
Mgi Id  MGI:3833203 Doi  10.1016/j.molimm.2008.09.023
Citation  Scheikl T, et al. (2009) Reduced notch activity is associated with an impaired marginal zone B cell development and function in Sly1 mutant mice. Mol Immunol 46(5):969-77
abstractText  MZ B cells represent a distinct lineage of naive B lymphocytes, apart from FO B cells and peritoneal B1 cells, and mediate humoral immune responses against blood-borne type 2 T-independent antigens. Regulation of MZ B cell development involves the Notch receptor signaling, the intensity of B cell receptor signals, and cell compartmentalization by adhesion and chemokine receptors. Our previous work showed that gene-targeted mice expressing a truncated form of the putative signaling adapter protein SLy1 exhibit reduced numbers of a splenic B cell population enriched in MZ B cells. Here, we demonstrate that Sly1(d/d) mice exhibit a partial, but selective, block in the transition from pre-MZ to mature MZ B cells. Development of both T1 and T2 precursor subsets and FO B cells was normal in Sly1(d/d) mice. Consistent with the loss of MZ B cells, the production of antigen-specific IgM antibodies following immunization with pneumococcal polysaccharides was severely impaired in Sly1(d/d) mice. Importantly, expression of the Notch signaling mediator RBP-J and the Notch target genes Hes-1 and Hes-5 was markedly reduced in MZ but not FO B cells of Sly1(d/d) mice. In contrast, B cell receptor signaling, expression and function of LFA-1 and alpha4-integrins, and expression of chemokine receptors appeared intact in Sly1(d/d) cells. Collectively, these results provide strong evidence that SLy1 is important for the generation and function of MZ B cells and suggest a novel link between SLy1 and the activity of the Notch pathway in the development of MZ B cells.
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