Impairment of T-cell-dependent B-cell responses and Bl cell development in CD19-deficient mice

RC Rickert, K Rajewsky, J Roes - Nature, 1995 - nature.com
RC Rickert, K Rajewsky, J Roes
Nature, 1995nature.com
CD 19 is the hallmark differentiation antigen of the B lineage. Its early expression has
implicated a role for CD 19 during the antigen-independent phases of B-cell development,
whereas in mature B cells CD 19 can act synergistically with surface immunoglobulin to
induce activation 1. We have generated CD19-deficient mice and found that development of
conventional B cells is unperturbed. However, mature CD19-/-B cells show a profound
deficiency in responding to protein antigens that require T-cell help. This is accompanied by …
Abstract
CD 19 is the hallmark differentiation antigen of the B lineage. Its early expression has implicated a role for CD 19 during the antigen-independent phases of B-cell development, whereas in mature B cells CD 19 can act synergistically with surface immunoglobulin to induce activation1. We have generated CD19-deficient mice and found that development of conventional B cells is unperturbed. However, mature CD19-/- B cells show a profound deficiency in responding to protein antigens that require T-cell help. This is accompanied by a lack of germinal centre formation and affinity maturation of serum antibodies. Thus CD 19 is crucial for both initial B-cell activation by T-cell-dependent antigens and the maturation and/or selection of the activated cells into the memory compartment. An impairment in ligand-driven selection may also be responsible for the observation of a striking reduction in the B-l (formerly Ly-1) B-cell subset, thought to develop under the control of self-antigens and bacterial antigens (reviewed in ref. 2).
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