Pax5 is indispensable for the commitment of early lymphoid progenitors to the B cell lineage as well as for the development of B cells. To better understand the functional importance of Pax5 at the later stages of B cell differentiation, we established a Pax5-deficient DT40 B cell line. The Pax5(-/-) cells exhibited slower growth, decreased surface IgM expression, and total loss of B cell receptor signaling. Moreover, the expression of the plasma cell-characteristic transcription factors Blimp-1 and XBP-1 were significantly upregulated and the expression of Bcl-6 diminished in the Pax5(-/-) cells, and this alteration was normalized by restored Pax5 expression. The Pax5-deficient cells further manifested substantially elevated secretion of IgM into the supernatant, another characteristic of plasma cells. These results indicate that downregulation of Pax5 function promotes the plasma cell differentiation of B cells.
We examined redstart Phoenicurus phoenicurus populations over a period of fifteen years to study interactions between the cuckoo Cuculus canorus and its cavity‐nesting host. Over 380 redstart nests were checked and more than 100 cuckoo eggs were found during the study period. The average parasitism rate was 20%. The cuckoos’ breeding success was extremely low, only 18 chicks surviving to the fledgling stage. When redstarts were parasitized experimentally with artificial cuckoo eggs, they rejected eight percent of mimetic eggs and 44% of non‐mimetic eggs. We were not able to record any rejection of the real cuckoo eggs. However, about 30% of the real cuckoo eggs were found outside the redstart's nest cup. This could be the result of laying failures by the cuckoo, rather than of a strong rejection behaviour by the redstart. We suggest that redstarts’ cavity nesting itself was a factor that reduced the cost of the parasitism dramatically. Firstly, it makes it difficult for the female cuckoo to lay her egg correctly in the nest and secondly, it is more difficult for the cuckoo chick to evict the host's eggs or nestlings effectively from the nest. Only 54% of the cuckoo chicks were able to evict all the host eggs or chicks from the nest. When reared in mixed broods, cuckoo chicks survived only in every second case to fledgling age, while at least one redstart chick from every brood managed to leave the nest.
The avian immune system provides an excellent model to track B-cell development from prebursal stem cells throughout B-cell differentiation and maturation. Bursal B cells are uniquely positioned at the crossroads of B-cell development, having properties of both stem cells and of mature B cells, as demonstrated by their ability to reconstruct the bursal B-cell compartment and to express and diversify the B-cell receptor at their cell surface. To understand avian B-cell development better, we determined the gene expression profile of different B-cell stages using a bursal expressed sequence tag array. The expression profile of bursal B cells reveals the presence of factors associated with B-cell signaling and defines novel B-cell-specific genes. Genes associated with proliferation, apoptosis, DNA repair and recombination are abundantly expressed. The expression profile of the DT40 cell line is most similar to bursal B cells rather than to other stages of B-cell development, confirming the suitability of DT40 for studies of B-cell physiology. Interestingly, prebursal stem cells express genes involved in B-cell receptor signaling, although they express only low levels of immunoglobulin genes. This suggests that B-cell receptor-mediated selection is present before bursal colonization. The gene expression signatures of germinal centers and cells of the Harderian gland indicate that evolutionarily conserved genetic programs regulate B-cell activation and terminal differentiation.
Previous studies on mammals have demonstrated that a tumour necrosis factor family member, B-cell-activating factor (BAFF) (BlyS, TALL-1), is mainly produced by myeloid and dendritic cells and that BAFF promotes B-cell differentiation and survival in a paracrine fashion. We have recently shown that BAFF is upregulated at the bursal stage of the avian B-cell development. We now show that the avian bursal B cells and B-cell lines, RP-9, RP-13 and DT40, express chicken BAFF (cBAFF). In situ hybridization confirms strong cBAFF expression within the bursal follicles. Like mammals, cBAFF is expressed in the avian myeloblast and myelomonocytic cell lines but not in the peripheral blood ab and gd T cells. The binding of recombinant human BAFF (hBAFF) to the bursal B-cells indicates a conserved receptor-ligand binding. Furthermore, the recombinant hBAFF has a positive effect on bursal cell proliferation and transiently inhibits cell death in vitro. In conclusion, cBAFF is highly conserved structurally, but as a novel observation we suggest cBAFF to function in an autocrine fashion to promote the growth and maturation of follicular B cells in bursa of Fabricius.
Summary. The serum concentration of oncostatin M (OSM) was measured in 40 multiple myeloma patients at diagnosis. Serum OSM level exceeded the sensitivity limit of the ELISA assay in eight (20%) of these patients (OSM + patients). The serum levels of IL-6, another member of the gp130 cytokine family, and C-reactive protein (CRP) as a surrogate of IL-6 were significantly higher in OSM + patients. There was a trend towards higher serum 2M concentration in OSM + patients, whereas there was no difference in the serum sIL-6R level or clinical data (age, gender, myeloma protein or stage) between the two groups. Two human myeloma cell lines secreted OSM and IL-6, but not IL-11 or leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF), which suggests an important role for OSM and IL-6 in supporting growth of myeloma cells.
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