The Francis Crick Institute
Browse

Intrinsic properties of human germinal center B cells set antigen affinity thresholds

Download (2.3 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-08-27, 15:19 authored by Kihyuck Kwak, Nicolas Quizon, Haewon Sohn, Avva Saniee, Javier Manzella-Lapeira, Prasida Holla, Joseph Brzostowski, Jinghua Lu, HengYi Xie, Chenguang Xu, Katelyn M Spillane, Pavel Tolar, Susan K Pierce
Protective antibody responses to vaccination or infection depend on affinity maturation, a process by which high-affinity germinal center (GC) B cells are selected on the basis of their ability to bind, gather, and present antigen to T follicular helper (Tfh) cells. Here, we show that human GC B cells have intrinsically higher-affinity thresholds for both B cell antigen receptor (BCR) signaling and antigen gathering as compared with naïve B cells and that these functions are mediated by distinct cellular structures and pathways that ultimately lead to antigen affinity- and Tfh cell-dependent differentiation to plasma cells. GC B cells bound antigen through highly dynamic, actin- and ezrin-rich pod-like structures that concentrated BCRs. The behavior of these structures was dictated by the intrinsic antigen affinity thresholds of GC B cells. Low-affinity antigens triggered continuous engagement and disengagement of membrane-associated antigens, whereas high-affinity antigens induced stable synapse formation. The pod-like structures also mediated affinity-dependent antigen internalization by unconventional pathways distinct from those of naïve B cells. Thus, intrinsic properties of human GC B cells set thresholds for affinity selection.

History

Usage metrics

    The Francis Crick Institute

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC