Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.

B lymphocytes are subject to elimination following strong BCR ligation in the absence of appropriate second signals, and this mechanism mediates substantial cell losses during late differentiation steps in the bone marrow and periphery. Mature B cells may also be eliminated through this mechanism as...

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Main Authors: Gitit Shahaf, Michael P Cancro, Ramit Mehr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-03-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2830485?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-24db897bf92c4a8eb7fc8d4bf33e05512020-11-25T01:52:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-03-0153e949710.1371/journal.pone.0009497Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.Gitit ShahafMichael P CancroRamit MehrB lymphocytes are subject to elimination following strong BCR ligation in the absence of appropriate second signals, and this mechanism mediates substantial cell losses during late differentiation steps in the bone marrow and periphery. Mature B cells may also be eliminated through this mechanism as well as through normal turnover, but the population containing mature cells destined for elimination has not been identified. Herein, we asked whether the transitional 3 (T3) subset, which contains most newly formed cells undergoing anergic death, could also include mature B cells destined for elimination.To interrogate this hypothesis and its implications, we applied mathematical models to previously generated in vivo labeling data. Our analyses reveal that the death rate of T3 B cells is far higher than the death rates of all other splenic B cell subpopulations. Further, the model, in which the T3 pool includes both newly formed and mature primary B cells destined for apoptotic death, shows that this cell loss may account for nearly all mature B cell turnover.This finding has implications for the mechanism of normal mature B cell turnover.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2830485?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gitit Shahaf
Michael P Cancro
Ramit Mehr
spellingShingle Gitit Shahaf
Michael P Cancro
Ramit Mehr
Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Gitit Shahaf
Michael P Cancro
Ramit Mehr
author_sort Gitit Shahaf
title Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
title_short Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
title_full Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
title_fullStr Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature B cells.
title_sort kinetic modeling reveals a common death niche for newly formed and mature b cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-03-01
description B lymphocytes are subject to elimination following strong BCR ligation in the absence of appropriate second signals, and this mechanism mediates substantial cell losses during late differentiation steps in the bone marrow and periphery. Mature B cells may also be eliminated through this mechanism as well as through normal turnover, but the population containing mature cells destined for elimination has not been identified. Herein, we asked whether the transitional 3 (T3) subset, which contains most newly formed cells undergoing anergic death, could also include mature B cells destined for elimination.To interrogate this hypothesis and its implications, we applied mathematical models to previously generated in vivo labeling data. Our analyses reveal that the death rate of T3 B cells is far higher than the death rates of all other splenic B cell subpopulations. Further, the model, in which the T3 pool includes both newly formed and mature primary B cells destined for apoptotic death, shows that this cell loss may account for nearly all mature B cell turnover.This finding has implications for the mechanism of normal mature B cell turnover.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2830485?pdf=render
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AT michaelpcancro kineticmodelingrevealsacommondeathnichefornewlyformedandmaturebcells
AT ramitmehr kineticmodelingrevealsacommondeathnichefornewlyformedandmaturebcells
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