CD 19 and BAFF‐R can signal to promote B‐cell survival in the absence of Syk

E Hobeika, E Levit‐Zerdoun, V Anastasopoulou… - The EMBO …, 2015 - embopress.org
E Hobeika, E Levit‐Zerdoun, V Anastasopoulou, R Pohlmeyer, S Altmeier, A Alsadeq…
The EMBO journal, 2015embopress.org
The development and function of B lymphocytes is regulated by numerous signaling
pathways, some emanating from the B‐cell antigen receptor (BCR). The spleen tyrosine
kinase (Syk) plays a central role in the activation of the BCR, but less is known about its
contribution to the survival and maintenance of mature B cells. We generated mice with an
inducible and B‐cell‐specific deletion of the Syk gene and found that a considerable fraction
of mature Syk‐negative B cells can survive in the periphery for an extended time. Syk …
Abstract
The development and function of B lymphocytes is regulated by numerous signaling pathways, some emanating from the B‐cell antigen receptor (BCR). The spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) plays a central role in the activation of the BCR, but less is known about its contribution to the survival and maintenance of mature B cells. We generated mice with an inducible and B‐cell‐specific deletion of the Syk gene and found that a considerable fraction of mature Syk‐negative B cells can survive in the periphery for an extended time. Syk‐negative B cells are defective in BCR, RP105 and CD38 signaling but still respond to an IL‐4, anti‐CD40, CpG or LPS stimulus. Our in vivo experiments show that Syk‐deficient B cells require BAFF receptor and CD19/PI3K signaling for their long‐term survival. These studies also shed a new light on the signals regulating the maintenance of the normal mature murine B‐cell pool.
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