Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/832
Title: CD40 Signaling Drives B Lymphocytes Into an Intermediate Memory-Like State, Poised Between Naïve and Plasma Cells
Authors: Vaidya, Tushar
Upadhyay, Mala
Priya, G Krishna
Ramesh, P
Madhavi, M B
Rath, Satyajit
Bal, Vineeta
George, Anna
Issue Date: Oct-2014
Publisher: Wiley Periodicals, Inc
Abstract: Immunological memory comprising of antigen-specific B and T cells contributes to the acquisition of long-term resistance to pathogens. Interactions between CD40 on B cells and CD40L on T cells are responsible for several aspects of acquired immune responses including generation of memory B cells. In order to gain insights into events leading to memory B cell formation, we analyzed the genome-wide expression profile of murine naive B cells stimulated in the presence of anti-CD40. We have identified over 8,000 genes whose expression is altered minimally 1.5-fold at least at one time point over a 3-day time course. The array analysis indicates that changes in expression level of maximum number of these genes occur within 24 h of anti-CD40 treatment. In parallel, we have studied the events following CD40 ligation by examining the expression of known regulators of naive B cell to plasma cell transition, including Pax5 and BLIMP1. The expression profile of these regulatory genes indicates firstly, that CD40 signaling activates naïve B cells to a phenotype that is intermediate between the naive and plasma cell stages of the B cell differentiation. Secondly, the major known regulator of plasma cell differentiation, BLIMP1, gets irreversibly downregulated upon anti-CD40 treatment. Additionally, our data reveal that CD40 signaling mediated BLIMP1 downregulation occurs by non-Pax5/non-Bcl6 dependent mechanisms, indicating novel mechanisms at work that add to the complexity of understanding of B cell master regulatory molecules like BLIMP1 and Pax5.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/832
Appears in Collections:Mucosal Immunology, Publications

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