PLoS Biology (Oct 2013)

Identification of a new stromal cell type involved in the regulation of inflamed B cell follicles.

  • Cyrille Mionnet,
  • Isabelle Mondor,
  • Audrey Jorquera,
  • Marie Loosveld,
  • Julien Maurizio,
  • Marie-Laure Arcangeli,
  • Nancy H Ruddle,
  • Jonathan Nowak,
  • Michel Aurrand-Lions,
  • Hervé Luche,
  • Marc Bajénoff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001672
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. e1001672

Abstract

Read online

Lymph node (LN) stromal cells provide survival signals and adhesive substrata to lymphocytes. During an immune response, B cell follicles enlarge, questioning how LN stromal cells manage these cellular demands. Herein, we used a murine fate mapping system to describe a new stromal cell type that resides in the T cell zone of resting LNs. We demonstrated that upon inflammation, B cell follicles progressively trespassed into the adjacent T cell zone and surrounded and converted these stromal cells into CXCL13 secreting cells that in return delineated the new boundaries of the growing follicle. Acute B cell ablation in inflamed LNs abolished CXCL13 secretion in these cells, while LT-β deficiency in B cells drastically affected this conversion. Altogether, we reveal the existence of a dormant stromal cell subset that can be functionally awakened by B cells to delineate the transient boundaries of their expanding territories upon inflammation.