Mouse CD20 expression and function.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
CD20 plays a role in human B cell proliferation and is an effective target for immunotherapy. In this study, mouse CD20 expression and biochemistry were assessed for the first time using a new panel of CD20-specific mAb, with CD20 function assessed using CD20-deficient (CD20(-/-)) mice. CD20 expression was B cell restricted and was initiated during late pre-B cell development. The frequency and density of CD20 expression increased during B cell maturation in the bone marrow, with a subpopulation of transitional IgM(hi) B cells expressing higher CD20 levels than the majority of mature recirculating B cells. Transitional T1 B cells in the spleen also expressed high CD20 levels, providing a useful new marker for this B cell subset. In CD20(-/-) mice, immature and mature B cell IgM expression was approximately 20-30% lower relative to B cells from wild-type littermates. In addition, CD19-induced intracellular calcium responses were significantly reduced in CD20(-/-) B cells, with a less dramatic effect on IgM-induced responses. These results reveal a role for CD20 in transmembrane Ca(2+) movement in mouse primary B cells that complements previous results obtained using human CD20 cDNA-transfected cell lines. Otherwise, B cell development, tissue localization, signal transduction, proliferation, T cell-dependent antibody responses and affinity maturation were normal in CD20(-/-) mice. Thus, mouse and human CD20 share similar patterns of expression and function. These studies thereby provide an animal model for studying CD20 function in vivo and the molecular mechanisms that influence anti-CD20 immunotherapy.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Uchida, J; Lee, Y; Hasegawa, M; Liang, Y; Bradney, A; Oliver, JA; Bowen, K; Steeber, DA; Haas, KM; Poe, JC; Tedder, TF
Published Date
- January 2004
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 16 / 1
Start / End Page
- 119 - 129
PubMed ID
- 14688067
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0953-8178
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1093/intimm/dxh009
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- England