In:
Clinical and Experimental Immunology, Oxford University Press (OUP), Vol. 87, No. 1 ( 2008-06-28), p. 31-36
Kurzfassung:
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from HIV-infected seropositive (HIV+) but not from normal, seronegative (HIV-) individuals are known to produce anti-HIV antibodies in vitro, in the absence or presence of pokeweed mitogen (PWM). Previous studies showed that up to 20–40% of spontaneously immunoglobulin-secreting B cells from HIV+ individuals are HIV-specific. To analyse the frequency of anti-HIV B cells among “total” peripheral blood B cells in the present study, we used a limiting dilution assay in which EL-4 thymoma cells induce clones of immunoglobulln-secreting cells in activated as well as resting B cells. Anti-HIV B cells were detected not only in 11/12 HIV+ individuals (with frequencies from 1/910 lo 1/21 500 B cells cultured; one negative test was from a person undergoing seroconversion), but also in 4/9 HIV normal blood donors (1/16200 to 1/49000 B cells cultured) and in 3/6 newborns from HIV mothers (1/11 800 to l/26 600 B cells cultured). The mean frequency was nine times higher in the HIV individuals than in the normal donors. As in previous studies, only the cells from HIV individuals generated anti-HIV antibodies in PBMC bulk cultures with or without PWM. The relative proportion of specific anti-HIV antibody total immunoglobulin in PBMC bulk cultures was 800 times higher by the mean than in EL-4 B cell cultures from HIV individuals (whereby the total immunoglobulin secretion for equal numbers of B cells cultured was 500 times lower for PBMC). These different results obtained with different assays suggest that in seropositives most anti-HIV B cells belong to an activated B compartment which is quite small, even in a disease with B cell hyperactivity. Therefore, the specific B cells are strongly diluted among the EL-4 cell-responsive, total B cells. On the other hand, the EL-4 assay can detect HIV-reactive B cells in the B ceil repertoire of normal, non-infected individuals.
Materialart:
Online-Ressource
ISSN:
1365-2249
,
0009-9104
DOI:
10.1111/j.1365-2249.1992.tb06409.x
Sprache:
Englisch
Verlag:
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Publikationsdatum:
2008
ZDB Id:
2020024-9
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