Marginal zone B cells regulate antigen capture by marginal zone macrophages (original) (raw)
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Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950), 2016
Marginal zone macrophages (MZM) are strategically located in the spleen, lining the marginal sinus where they sense inflammation and capture Ag from the circulation. One of the receptors expressed by MZM is scavenger receptor macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO), which has affinity for modified self-antigens. In this article, we show that engagement of MARCO on murine macrophages induces extracellular ATP and loss of CD21 and CD62L on marginal zone B cells. Engagement of MARCO also leads to reduction of Ag transport by marginal zone B cells and affects the subsequent immune response. This study highlights a novel function for MZM in regulating Ag transport and activation, and we suggest that MARCO-dependent ATP release regulates this through shedding of CD21 and CD62L. Because systemic lupus erythematosus patients were shown to acquire autoantibodies against MARCO, this highlights a mechanism that could affect a patient's ability to combat infections.
Macrophages Control the Retention and Trafficking of B Lymphocytes in the Splenic Marginal Zone
Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2003
The marginal zone of the spleen is a precisely ordered region that contains specialized subsets of B lymphocytes and macrophages. Disruption of the negative signaling inositol phosphatase, SH2-containing inositol-5-phosphatase 1 (SHIP), results in the loss of marginal zone B cells (MZBs) with reorganization of marginal zone macrophages (MZMOs) to the red pulp of the spleen. This primary macrophage defect, as revealed by selectively depleting SHIP in myeloid cells shows that MZMOs are specifically required for the retention of MZBs. The MZMO phenotype was reverted in SHIP/Bruton's tyrosine kinase (Btk) double knockout mice, thus identifying the Btk activating pathway as an essential component being regulated by SHIP. Furthermore, we identified a direct interaction between the MARCO scavenger receptor on MZMOs and MZBs. Activation or disruption of this interaction results in MZB migration to the follicle. The migration of the MZMOs was further studied after the response to Staphylococcus aureus , which induced MZMOs to move into the red pulp while MZBs migrated into the follicular zone. The marginal zone is therefore a dynamic structure in which retention and trafficking of B cells requires specific macrophage-B cell interactions.
Blood, 2002
Marginal zone macrophages express a murine homologue of DC-SIGN (973 articles) Phagocytes (5013 articles) Immunobiology Articles on similar topics can be found in the following Blood collections http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/site/misc/rights.xhtml#repub\_requests Information about reproducing this article in parts or in its entirety may be found online at: http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/site/misc/rights.xhtml#reprints Information about ordering reprints may be found online at: http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/site/subscriptions/index.xhtml Information about subscriptions and ASH membership may be found online at:
Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 2014
The marginal zone (MZ) region of the spleen plays an important role in leukocyte traffic and the removal of blood-borne pathogens by resident macrophages. Macrophage receptor with a collagenous structure (MARCO), expressed by MZ macrophages, recognizes several microbial ligands and is also involved in the retention of MZ B cells. Here, we report that MARCO is also associated with follicular dendritic cells (FDCs) in the spleen. In its FDC-associated form MARCO is arranged in 0.3-0.5-μm diameter granular-fibrillar structures with an appearance similar to the white pulp conduit system formed by fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs), but with different compartment preference. The follicular display of MARCO resists irradiation and requires the presence of both MZ macrophages and differentiated FDCs. The follicular delivery of MARCO is independent from the shuffling of marginal zone B cells, and it persists after clodronate liposome-mediated depletion of MZ macrophages. Our findings thus indicate that MARCO is distributed to both MZ and follicles within the spleen into conduit-like structures, where FDC-bound MARCO may mediate communication between the stromal microenvironments of MZ and follicles.
International Immunology, 2003
The marginal zone macrophages of the spleen are implicated in the clearance of polysaccharides, but underlying mechanisms need to be pinpointed. SIGN-R1 is one of ®ve recently identi®ed mouse genes that are homologous to human DC-SIGN and encode a single, external, C-terminal Ctype lectin domain. We ®nd that a polyclonal antibody to a speci®c SIGN-R1 peptide reacts primarily and strongly with a subset of macrophages in the marginal zone of spleen and lymph node medulla. In both sites, SIGN-R1 exists primarily in an aggregated form, resistant to dissociation into monomers upon boiling in SDS under reducing conditions. Upon transfection into three different cell lines, high-mol.-wt forms bearing SIGN-R1 are expressed, as well as reactivity with ER-TR9, a mAb previously described to react selectively with marginal zone macrophages. SIGN-R1-expressing macrophages preferentially sequester dextrans following i.v. injection. Likewise, when phagocytic cells are enriched from spleen and tested in culture, dextran is selectively endocytosed by a subset of very large SIGN-R1 + cells representing~5% of total released macrophages. Uptake of FITC±dextran by these macrophages in vivo and in vitro is blocked by ER-TR9 and polyclonal anti-SIGN-R1 antibodies. Following transfection with SIGN-R1, cell lines become competent to endocytose dextrans. The dextran localizes primarily to compartments lacking transferrin receptor and the LAMP-1 CD107a panlysosomal antigen. Therefore, SIGN-R1 mediates the uptake of dextran polysaccharides, and it is predominantly expressed in the macrophages of the splenic marginal zone and lymph node medulla.
European Journal of Immunology, 2007
The role secretory IgM has in protecting splenic tissue from LPS-induced damage was assessed in mice incapable of secreting IgM but able to express surface IgM and IgD. Within seconds after LPS challenge, 99% of the 131 I-labeled LPS was found in the liver and the spleen of both sIgM-deficient and wild-type mice. In the spleen FITC-labeled LPS was found on the surface of 2F8 + scavenger receptor macrophages localized in the outer marginal zone, while none of the labeled LPS could be detected on marginal zone ER-TR9 + and MOMA-1 + macrophages. An additional population of macrophages, MOMA-2 + , were capable of producing C3 locally in the T and B cell zone after LPS challenge. Local C3 production was regulated, as no C3 was found in splenic tissue of unchallenged mice. Interestingly, in the absence of circulating and locally produced secretory IgM, MOMA-2 + macrophages of the T and B cell zone failed to establish an additional ring of C3-producing macrophages in the outer B cell zone close to the marginal zone upon LPS challenge. The consequence was a massive destruction of the microarchitecture of the spleen where marginal zones disorganized, lymphoid follicles and T cell zones disrupted and follicular DC (FDC) networks disappeared.
Nature Immunology, 2011
Neutrophils utilize immunoglobulins (Igs) to clear antigen, but their role in Ig production is unknown. Here we identified neutrophils around the marginal zone (MZ) of the spleen, a B cell area specialized in T-independent Ig responses to circulating antigen. Neutrophils colonized peri-MZ areas after post-natal mucosal colonization by microbes and enhanced their B-helper function upon receiving reprogramming signals from splenic sinusoidal endothelial cells, including interleukin 10 (IL-10). Splenic neutrophils induced Ig class switching, somatic hypermutation and antibody production by activating MZ B cells through a mechanism involving the cytokines BAFF, APRIL and IL-21. Neutropenic patients had fewer and hypomutated MZ B cells and less preimmune Igs to T-independent antigens, which indicates that neutrophils generate an innate layer of antimicrobial Ig defense by interacting with MZ B cells.
Putative role of marginal zone B cells in pathophysiological processes
Scandinavian Journal of Immunology, 2020
marginal zone B cells (MZB cells), thymus independent (TI), thymus dependent (TD), Accepted Article This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved mucosa associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma (MALT lymphoma), marginal zone (MZ), mucosal addressin cell adhesion molecule 1 (MadCAM-1), periarteriolar lymphatic sheath (PALS), metallophylic MOMA1 + macrophages (MMM), MZ macrophages (MZM), B cell receptor (BCR), natural killer (NK) cells, class-switch recombination (CSR), Toll-like receptors (TLR), somatic hypermutation (SHM), Bruton's tyrosine kynasis (Btk), gut-associated lymphoid tissues (GALT), natural killer T (NKT) cells, invariant NKT (iNKT), marginal zone macrophages (MZM), specific intracellular adhesion molecule-grabbing nonintegrin receptor 1 (SIGN-R1), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL), nodal marginal zone lymphoma (NMZL), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), paediatric nodal marginal zone lymphoma (pNMZL), Helicobacter pylori (HP)
Pre/pro-B cells generate macrophage populations during homeostasis and inflammation
Most tissue-resident macrophages (Mφs) are believed to be derived prenatally and are assumed to maintain themselves throughout life by self-proliferation. However, in adult mice we identified a progenitor within bone marrow, early pro-B cell/fraction B, that differentiates into tissue Mφs. These Mφ precursors have non-rearranged B-cell receptor genes and coexpress myeloid (GR1, CD11b, and CD16/32) and lymphoid (B220 and CD19) lineage markers. During steady state, these precursors exit bone marrow, losing Gr1, and enter the systemic circulation, seeding the gastrointestinal system as well as pleural and peritoneal cavities but not the brain. While in these tissues, they acquire a transcriptome identical to embryonically derived tissue-resident Mφs. Similarly, these Mφ precursors also enter sites of inflammation, gaining CD115, F4/80, and CD16/32, and become indistinguishable from blood monocyte-derived Mφs. Thus, we have identified a population of cells within the bone marrow early pro-B cell compartment that possess functional plasticity to differentiate into either tissue-resident or inflammatory Mφs, depending on microenvironmental signals. We propose that these precursors represent an additional source of Mφ populations in adult mice during steady state and inflammation.