Frontiers in Immunology (Apr 2019)

The Differentiation in vitro of Human Tonsil B Cells With the Phenotypic and Functional Characteristics of T-bet+ Atypical Memory B Cells in Malaria

  • Abhijit A. Ambegaonkar,
  • Satoshi Nagata,
  • Susan K. Pierce,
  • Haewon Sohn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00852
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Malaria is a deadly infectious disease associated with fundamental changes in the composition of the memory B cell (MBC) compartment, most notably a large expansion of T-bet+ MBCs, termed atypical MBCs. However, we know little about the precursors of atypical MBCs and the conditions that drive their differentiation. We compared the responses of human tonsil naïve B cells, MBCs, and germinal center B cells to a variety of stimulatory conditions. We determined that prolonged antigen presentation in the presence of CpG and IFN-γ induced maximal expression of T-bet and other phenotypic markers of malaria-associated atypical MBCs primarily in naïve B cells in vitro. Importantly T-bet+ naïve-derived B cells resembled atypical MBCs in their hypo-responsiveness to signaling through their B cell receptors. Thus, naïve B cells can be induced to differentiate into phenotypically and functionally atypical-like MBCs in vitro under conditions that may prevail in chronic infectious diseases in vivo.

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