Peritoneal and splenic B‐1 cells are separable by phenotypic, functional, and transcriptomic characteristics

JR Tumang, WD Hastings, C Bai… - European journal of …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
JR Tumang, WD Hastings, C Bai, TL Rothstein
European journal of immunology, 2004Wiley Online Library
B‐1 cells constitute a distinct B cell population with unique phenotypic and functional
characteristics. Although the origin of B‐1 cells remains controversial, B‐1 cells in different
locations are generally considered to be part of the same pool. To determine the validity of
this assumption, we examined peritoneal and splenic B‐1 cells isolated by flow cytometric
cell sorting from normal mice for several features. We found that splenic B‐1 cells differ from
peritoneal B‐1 cells in terms of surface antigen expression, viability ex vivo, immunoglobulin …
Abstract
B‐1 cells constitute a distinct B cell population with unique phenotypic and functional characteristics. Although the origin of B‐1 cells remains controversial, B‐1 cells in different locations are generally considered to be part of the same pool. To determine the validity of this assumption, we examined peritoneal and splenic B‐1 cells isolated by flow cytometric cell sorting from normal mice for several features. We found that splenic B‐1 cells differ from peritoneal B‐1 cells in terms of surface antigen expression, viability ex vivo, immunoglobulin secretion in vitro, stimulated cell cycle progression, and expression of Notch family, Notch‐dependent, and Notch‐associated genes. These results indicate that splenic and peritoneal B‐1 cells are not the same and thus dispute the notion that B‐1 cells are uniform, and may suggest that different subpopulations of B‐1 cells arise separately, home individually, and/or are heavily influenced by local environmental factors.
Wiley Online Library