1. A form of immunologic tolerance through impairment of germinal center development
- Author
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Bali Pulendran, Maria Karvelas, and G. J. V. Nossal
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Cellular differentiation ,Serum albumin ,Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell ,Spleen ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Biology ,Flow cytometry ,Immune tolerance ,Nitrophenols ,Mice ,Peanut Agglutinin ,Antigen ,Lectins ,medicine ,Immune Tolerance ,Animals ,Immunologic Tolerance ,B-Lymphocytes ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Germinal center ,Cell Differentiation ,Flow Cytometry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Research Article - Abstract
Primary immunization with the T-cell-dependent antigen (4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl)acetyl (NP) coupled to human serum albumin results in the development of two pathways of B-cell development, the extrafollicular pathway and the germinal center pathway. Soluble, deaggregated NP-human serum albumin injected before immunization results in a marked diminution of clonable higher-affinity antibody-forming cell precursors--i.e., a form of immunologic tolerance within the secondary B-cell repertoire. We describe here the cellular changes in the spleen that underlie this tolerance. Using multiparameter flow cytometry, we show that tolerant mice develop far fewer NP-binding, peanut agglutinin-positive, or germinal center cells than the control immunized mice; 14 days after challenge control spleens have approximately 2 x 10(5) such cell per spleen, whereas the tolerant mice have approximately 1 x 10(4) cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate by immunohistology a reduction in the number of germinal centers containing lambda-bearing cells, characteristic of the response of C57BL/6 mice to NP. Taken together, these data suggest an impairment of germinal center development in the tolerant mice.
- Published
- 1994