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Distinct gene expression profiles in different B-cell compartments in human peripheral lymphoid organs.

Authors :
Yulei Shen
Iqbal, Javeed
Li Xiao
Lynch, Ryan C.
Rosenwald, Andreas
Staudt, Louis M.
Sherman, Simon
Dybkaer, Karen
Zhou, Guimei
Eudy, James D.
Delabie, Jan
McKeithan, Timothy W.
Chan, Wing C.
Source :
BMC Immunology; 2004, Vol. 5, p20-17, 17p, 7 Diagrams, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Background: There are three major B-cell compartments in peripheral lymphoid organs: the germinal center (GC), the mantle zone (MNZ) and the marginal zone (MGZ). Unique sets of B-cells reside in these compartments, and they have specific functional roles in humoral immune response. MNZ B cells are naïve cells in a quiescent state and may participate in GC reactions upon proper stimulation. The adult splenic MGZ contains mostly memory B cells and is also known to provide a rapid response to particulate antigens. The GC B-cells proliferate rapidly and undergo selection and affinity maturation. The B-cell maturational process is accompanied by changes in the expression of cell-surface and intracellular proteins and requires signals from the specialized microenvironments. Results: We performed laser microdissection of the three compartments for gene expression profiling by cDNA microarray. The transcriptional program of the GC was dominated by upregulation of genes associated with proliferation and DNA repair or recombination. The MNZ and MGZ showed increased expression of genes promoting cellular quiescence. The three compartments also revealed distinct repertoires of apoptosisassociated genes, chemokines and chemokine receptors. The MNZ and GC showed upregulation of CCL20 and CCL18 respectively. The MGZ was characterized by high expression of many chemokines genes e.g. CXCL12, CCL3, CCL14 and IFN-associated genes, consistent with its role in rapid response to infections. A stromal signature was identified including genes associated with macrophages or with synthesis of extracellular matrix and genes that influenced lymphocyte migration and survival. Differentially expressed genes that did not belong to the above categories include the well characterized BCL6 and CD10 and many others whose function is not known. Conclusions: Transcriptional profiling of B-cell compartments has identified groups of genes involved in critical molecular and cellular events that affect proliferation, survival migration, and differentiation of the cells. The gene expression study of normal B-cell compartments may additionally contribute to our understanding of the molecular abnormalities of the corresponding lymphoid tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712172
Volume :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29362574
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2172-5-20