Deletion of the α immunoglobulin chain membrane-anchoring region reduces but does not abolish IgA secretion.

Immunology

Université de Limoges, CNRS, UMR7276, Contrôle des Réponses Immunes B et Lymphoproliférations, Limoges, France.

Published: May 2012

Class switching and plasma cell differentiation occur at a high level within all mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues. The different classes of membrane immunoglobulin heavy chains are associated with the Igα/Igβ heterodimer within the B-cell receptor (BCR). Whether BCR isotypes convey specific signals adapted to the corresponding differentiation stages remains debated but IgG and IgA membranes have been suggested to promote plasma cell differentiation. We investigated the impact of blocking expression of the IgA-class BCR through a 'αΔtail' targeted mutation, deleting the Cα immunoglobulin gene membrane exon. This allowed us to evaluate to what extent class switching and plasma cell differentiation can be concurrent processes, allowing some αΔtail(+/+) B cells with an IgM BCR to directly differentiate into IgA plasma cells and yield serum secreted IgA in spite of the absence of membrane IgA(+) B lymphocytes. By contrast, in secretions the secretory IgA was very low, indicating that J-chain-positive plasma cells producing secretory IgA overwhelmingly differentiate from previously class-switched membrane IgA(+) memory B cells. In addition, although mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues are a major site for plasma cell accumulation, αΔtail(+/+) mice showed that the gut B-cell lineage homeostasis is not polarized toward plasma cell differentiation through a specific influence of the membrane IgA BCR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3372757PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2567.2012.03557.xDOI Listing

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