Published in

American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 11(145), p. 3618-3627, 1990

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.145.11.3618

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IL-5 induces a Pgp-1 (CD44) bright B cell subpopulation that is highly enriched in proliferative and Ig secretory activity and binds to hyaluronate.

Journal article published in 1990 by Shinya Murakami, Kensuke Miyake, Carl H. June ORCID, Paul W. Kincade, Rj J. Hodes
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract Pgp-1 expression was examined in unstimulated B cell populations and in B cells activated with several polyclonal stimuli. Flow cytometry analysis demonstrated that Pgp-1 expression increased when B cells were activated with supernatant of cloned Th2 cells, with LPS, or with IL-5, stimuli that induced polyclonal proliferation and differentiation. IL-5-primed B cells were phenotypically unique and could be divided into two distinct subpopulations based on the brightness of Pgp-1 expression. Furthermore, sterile sorting experiments showed that proliferating and differentiating B cells were highly enriched in a Pgp-1-bright, Ia-dull, B220-dull subpopulation. The possibility that Pgp-1 expressed on activated B cells functions as an adhesion molecule was evaluated by assessing adhesion of activated B cells to defined substrates. It was found that IL-5-activated B cells bound strongly to hyaluronate-coated surface, and this binding was specifically inhibited by anti-Pgp-1 Ab. These findings suggest that Pgp-1 expression is a useful marker which, under defined conditions, identifies the proliferating and differentiating subset of activated B cells. Moreover, the Pgp-1 bright subset of IL-5-primed B cells binds to hyaluronate in a Pgp-1-dependent manner that suggests a potential role of Pgp-1 in the in vivo adherence and trafficking of activated B cells.