Evidence for local expansion of IgA plasma cell precursors in human ileum

S Yuvaraj, G Dijkstra, JGM Burgerhof… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
S Yuvaraj, G Dijkstra, JGM Burgerhof, PM Dammers, M Stoel, A Visser, FGM Kroese, NA Bos
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
IgA plays a crucial role in establishment and maintenance of mucosal homeostasis between
host cells and commensal bacteria. To this end, numerous IgA plasma cells are located in
the intestinal lamina propria. Whether the (immediate) precursor cells for these plasma cells
can expand locally is not completely known and was studied here. The total number of IgA
plasma cells in human ileal biopsies was counted. Sequence analysis of IgA VH genes from
human ileal biopsies revealed the occurrence of many clonally related sequences within a …
Abstract
IgA plays a crucial role in establishment and maintenance of mucosal homeostasis between host cells and commensal bacteria. To this end, numerous IgA plasma cells are located in the intestinal lamina propria. Whether the (immediate) precursor cells for these plasma cells can expand locally is not completely known and was studied here. The total number of IgA plasma cells in human ileal biopsies was counted. Sequence analysis of IgA V H genes from human ileal biopsies revealed the occurrence of many clonally related sequences within a biopsy, but not between different biopsies. This observation strongly argues for local expansion of IgA precursor cells. By comparing the number of unique sequences with the number of clonally related sequences within a biopsy, we estimated that∼ 100–300 precursors were responsible for the 75,000 IgA-producing cells that were present per biopsy. These precursor cells must therefore have divided locally 9–10 times. Since all sequences contained mutations and most of the mutations present in clonally related sequences were shared, the IgA precursor cells must have arrived initially as mutated cells in the lamina propria. Our data show evidence for the existence of two waves of expansion for IgA-producing cells in human ileum. The first wave occurs during initial stimulation in germinal centers as evidenced by somatic hypermutations. A second wave of expansion of IgA-committed cells occurs locally within the lamina propria as evidenced by the high frequency of clonally related cells.
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