抗体库
生物
剧目
抗体
免疫学
B细胞
抗原
微生物群
微生物学
免疫球蛋白G
遗传学
声学
物理
作者
Hai Li,Julien P. Limenitakis,Victor Greiff,Bahtiyar Yılmaz,Olivier P. Schären,Camilla Urbaniak,Mirjam Zünd,Melissa A. Lawson,Ian D. Young,Sandra Rupp,Mathias Heikenwälder,Kathy D. McCoy,Siegfried Hapfelmeier,Stephanie C. Ganal‐Vonarburg,Andrew J. Macpherson
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2020-08-05
卷期号:584 (7820): 274-278
被引量:153
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-020-2564-6
摘要
Colonization by the microbiota causes a marked stimulation of B cells and induction of immunoglobulin, but mammals colonized with many taxa have highly complex and individualized immunoglobulin repertoires1,2. Here we use a simplified model of defined transient exposures to different microbial taxa in germ-free mice3 to deconstruct how the microbiota shapes the B cell pool and its functional responsiveness. We followed the development of the immunoglobulin repertoire in B cell populations, as well as single cells by deep sequencing. Microbial exposures at the intestinal mucosa generated oligoclonal responses that differed from those of germ-free mice, and from the diverse repertoire that was generated after intravenous systemic exposure to microbiota. The IgA repertoire—predominantly to cell-surface antigens—did not expand after dose escalation, whereas increased systemic exposure broadened the IgG repertoire to both microbial cytoplasmic and cell-surface antigens. These microbial exposures induced characteristic immunoglobulin heavy-chain repertoires in B cells, mainly at memory and plasma cell stages. Whereas sequential systemic exposure to different microbial taxa diversified the IgG repertoire and facilitated alternative specific responses, sequential mucosal exposure produced limited overlapping repertoires and the attrition of initial IgA binding specificities. This shows a contrast between a flexible response to systemic exposure with the need to avoid fatal sepsis, and a restricted response to mucosal exposure that reflects the generic nature of host–microbial mutualism in the mucosa. A mouse model of systemic versus mucosal exposure to microbial taxa reveals that the former provokes a flexible B cell response with a diverse immunoglobulin repertoire, whereas the latter generates a more-restricted response.
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