Transgenic expression of Bcl-xL or Bcl-2 by murine B cells enhances the in vivo antipolysaccharide, but not antiprotein, response to intact Streptococcus pneumoniae.

2007 
IgG antipolysaccharide (PS) and antiprotein responses to Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pn) are both CD4 + T cell dependent. However, the primary IgG anti-PS response terminates more quickly, uses a shorter period of T cell help, fails to generate memory, and is more dependent on membrane Ig (mIg) signaling. We thus determined whether this limited anti-PS response to Pn reflected a greater propensity of PS-specific B cells to undergo apoptosis. We used mice that constitutively expressed the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-x L or Bcl-2 as a B cell-specific transgene. Both transgenic (Tg) mice exhibited increased absolute numbers of splenic B-1 and peritoneal B-1b and B-2 cells, subsets implicated in anti-PS responses, but not in marginal zone B (MZB) cells. Both Tg mouse strains elicited, in an apparently Fas-independent manner, a more prolonged and higher peak primary IgM and IgG anti-PS, but not antiprotein, response to Pn, but without PS-specific memory. A similar effect was not observed using purified PS or pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. In vitro, both splenic MZB and follicular Tg B cells synthesized DNA at markedly higher levels than their wild-type counterparts, following mIg cross-linking. This was associated with increased clonal expansion and decreased apoptosis. Using Lsc −/− mice, the Pn-induced IgG response specific for the capsular PS was found to be almost entirely dependent on MZB cells. Collectively, these data suggest that apoptosis may limit mIg-dependent clonal expansion of PS-specific B cells during a primary immune response to an intact bacterium, as well as decrease the pool of PS-responding B cell subsets.
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