Polymeric C3dg primes human B lymphocytes for proliferation induced by anti-IgM.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Polymeric C3dg (pC3dg), having an average m.w. of approximately 400,000 and saturating complement receptor type 2 (CR2) on B lymphoblastoid cells at 1 micrograms/ml, was preincubated with tonsillar B cells for 24 h, after which anti-IgM was added and proliferation assessed by thymidine incorporation. Preculture of B cells with 0.01 to 1.0 micrograms/ml of polymerized C3dg (pC3dg) caused a dose-dependent enhancement of proliferation and accelerated entry into S phase after addition of anti-IgM. The continued presence of pC3dg during stimulation by anti-IgM was not required. pC3dg alone did not induce proliferation and preculture of B cells with C3dg monomer had no effect on the subsequent response to anti-IgM. The priming effect of pC3dg required at least 6 h and was greatest after 24 h of preculture. Preincubation with pC3dg did not lower the concentration of anti-IgM necessary for induction of proliferation, but did enhance proliferation at all concentrations above this threshold. Augmented proliferation occurred only in B cells of higher density in Percoll gradients, and neither T cells nor monocytes were required. Thus, independent interaction of CR2 with its natural ligand primes the B cell for subsequent stimulation through the Ag receptor, an effect that might synergize with the previously described CR2 function of lowering the threshold for B cell activation when crosslinked to membrane IgM.