Competition for refueling rather than cyclic reentry initiation evident in germinal centers.
Ziqi LongBethan PhillipsDaniel RadtkeMichael Meyer HermannOliver BannardPublished in: Science immunology (2022)
Antibody affinity maturation occurs in germinal centers (GCs) through iterative rounds of somatic hypermutation and proliferation in dark zones (DZs) and selection in light zones (LZs). GC B cells exit cell cycle a number of hours before entering LZs; therefore, continued participation in responses requires that they subsequently reenter cell cycle and move back to DZs, a process known as cyclic reentry. Affinity enhancements are thought to arise by B cells having to compete to initiate cyclic reentry each time they enter LZs, with T cell help being a major determinant; however, direct proof is lacking. Using Fucci2 mice, we confirmed an association between B cell receptor affinity and the first step of cyclic reentry, S phase initiation from a resting LZ state. However, neither T cell ablation nor MHCII deletion prevented resting LZ cells from reentering cell cycle, and this late G 1 -S transition was also not detectably restricted by competition. In contrast, using BATF induction as exemplar, we found that T cells "refueled" LZ cells in an affinity-dependent manner that was limited by both competition and cells' intrinsic antigen-acquiring abilities. Therefore, cyclic reentry initiation and B cell refueling are independently regulated in GCs, which may contribute to permitting cells of different competencies to be sustained alongside each other and allow T cell support to be provided across a dynamic range commensurate with affinity. We speculate that this less binary selection mechanism could help GCs nurture complex antibody maturation pathways and support the clonal diversity required for countering fast-evolving pathogens.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- cell cycle arrest
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- heart rate
- heart rate variability
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- capillary electrophoresis
- pi k akt
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell death
- transcription factor
- skeletal muscle
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- copy number
- contrast enhanced
- gram negative