In vitro generation of long-lived human plasma cells

M Cocco, S Stephenson, MA Care… - The Journal of …, 2012 - journals.aai.org
M Cocco, S Stephenson, MA Care, D Newton, NA Barnes, A Davison, A Rawstron…
The Journal of Immunology, 2012journals.aai.org
Plasma cells (PCs), the terminal effectors of humoral immunity, are short-lived unless
supported by niche environments in which they may persist for years. No model system has
linked B cell activation with niche function to allow the in vitro generation of long-lived PCs.
Thus, the full trajectory of B cell terminal differentiation has yet to be investigated in vitro. In
this article, we describe a robust model for the generation of polyclonal long-lived human
PCs from peripheral blood B cells. After a proliferative plasmablast phase, PCs persist in the …
Abstract
Plasma cells (PCs), the terminal effectors of humoral immunity, are short-lived unless supported by niche environments in which they may persist for years. No model system has linked B cell activation with niche function to allow the in vitro generation of long-lived PCs. Thus, the full trajectory of B cell terminal differentiation has yet to be investigated in vitro. In this article, we describe a robust model for the generation of polyclonal long-lived human PCs from peripheral blood B cells. After a proliferative plasmablast phase, PCs persist in the absence of cell division, with viability limited only by elective culture termination. Conservative predictions for PC life expectancy are 300 d, but with the potential for significantly longer life spans for some cells. These long-lived PCs are preferentially derived from memory B cells, and acquire a CD138 high phenotype analogous to that of human bone marrow PCs. Analysis of gene expression across the system defines clusters of genes with related dynamics and linked functional characteristics. Importantly, genes in these differentiation clusters demonstrate a similar overall pattern of expression for in vitro and ex vivo PCs. In vitro PCs are fully reprogrammed to a secretory state and are adapted to their secretory load, maintaining IgG secretion of 120 pg/cell/day in the absence of XBP1 mRNA splicing. By establishing a set of conditions sufficient to allow the development and persistence of mature human PCs in vitro, to our knowledge, we provide the first platform with which to sequentially explore and manipulate each stage of human PC differentiation.
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