posted on 2021-01-15, 11:06authored byRinako Nakagawa, Amparo Toboso-Navasa, Marta Schips, George Young, Leena Bhaw-Rosun, Miriam Llorian-Sopena, Probir Chakravarty, Abdul Karim Sesay, George Kassiotis, Michael Meyer-Hermann, Dinis Pedro Calado
Affinity maturation depends on how efficiently germinal centers (GCs) positively select B cells in the light zone (LZ). Positively selected GC B cells recirculate between LZs and dark zones (DZs) and ultimately differentiate into plasmablasts (PBs) and memory B cells (MBCs). Current understanding of the GC reaction presumes that cMyc-dependent positive selection of LZ B cells is a competitive affinity-dependent process; however, this cannot explain the production of GC-derived lower-affinity MBCs or retention of GC B cells with varied affinities. Here, by combining single-cell/bulk RNA sequencing and flow cytometry, we identified and characterized temporally and functionally distinct positively selected cMyc+ GC B cell subpopulations. cMyc+ LZ B cell subpopulations enriched with either higher- or lower-affinity cells diverged soon after permissive positive selection. The former subpopulation contained PB precursors, whereas the latter comprised less proliferative MBC precursors and future DZ entrants. The overall affinity of future DZ entrants was enhanced in the LZ through preferential proliferation of higher-affinity cells. Concurrently, lower-affinity cells were retained in GCs and protected from apoptosis. These findings redefine positive selection as a dynamic process generating three distinct B cell fates and elucidate how positive selection ensures clonal diversity for broad protection.
Funding
Crick (Grant ID: 10099, Grant title: Kassiotis FC001099)
Crick (Grant ID: 10057, Grant title: Calado FC001057)
Medical Research Council (Grant ID: MR/J008060/1, Grant title: MRC MR/J008060/1)