Antigen-antibody complexes bound to B-lymphocyte Fc gamma receptors regulate B-lymphocyte differentiation
- PMID: 2931182
- DOI: 10.1016/0008-8749(85)90324-7
Antigen-antibody complexes bound to B-lymphocyte Fc gamma receptors regulate B-lymphocyte differentiation
Abstract
We studied the effect of soluble antigen-antibody complexes on the responses of polyclonally activated murine B lymphocytes. For this, normal B lymphocytes were stimulated with rabbit F(ab')2 anti-mu and lymphokines. IgG complexes, particularly in antigen excess, inhibited the plaque-forming cell response (55-70%), while proliferation was unaffected. Maximal inhibition was obtained with small amounts (0.2-1.0 microgram/ml) of complexes. Neither antigen or antibody alone was inhibitory. Inhibition was mediated via binding of the IgG complexes to Fc gamma receptors of B lymphocytes: (1) neither T lymphocytes or adherent accessory cells were required; (2) IgM complexes did not inhibit; and (3) inhibition was not seen when monoclonal anti-Fc gamma receptor antibodies prevented binding of the IgG complexes to these receptors. Kinetic experiments showed that B lymphocytes are susceptible to this inhibitory signal for only a short time after stimulation. We conclude that IgG complexes bound to the Fc gamma receptors of B lymphocytes regulate B-lymphocyte differentiation.
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