Cell surface antigen CD5 is a marker for activated human B cells |
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Authors: | C Werner-Favre T L Vischer D Wohlwend R H Zubler |
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Affiliation: | Division of Hematology, Geneva University Hospital, Switzerland. |
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Abstract: | A minor subset of B cells which in vivo express the surface antigen CD5, has attracted much attention because of its involvement in autoimmune responses. On the basis of observations showing self-renewal capacity of such cells in mice and also the absence of a substantial change of CD5 phenotype during B cell activation in vitro, the CD5+ B cells are now generally considered to represent a separate cell lineage. In the present study, CD5- B cells were isolated by cell sorter and then stimulated in vitro with mutagenized EL4 thymoma cells in the presence of T cell supernatant. About 70% of the B cells were CD5+ after 3 days. Thus, the CD5 antigen behaves as a B cell activation marker. In our system we found that the frequency of rheumatoid factor-producing B cells was on average three times higher in CD5+ than in CD5- B cells isolated ex vivo from human peripheral blood. Most likely this reflects frequent activation of such autoreactive B cells in vivo. |
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