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The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Hamaguchi, Y; Uchida, J; Cain, DW; Venturi, GM; Poe, JC; Haas, KM; Tedder, TF
Published in: J Immunol
April 1, 2005

Although anti-CD20 immunotherapy effectively treats human lymphoma and autoimmune disease, the in vivo effect of immunotherapy on tissue B cells and their subsets is generally unknown. To address this, anti-mouse CD20 mAbs were used in a mouse model in which the extent and kinetics of tissue B cell depletion could be assessed in vivo. CD20 mAb treatment depleted most mature B cells within 2 days, with 95-98% of B cells in the bone marrow, blood, spleen, lymph nodes, and gut-associated lymphoid tissues depleted by day 7, including marginal zone and follicular B cells. The few spleen B cells remaining after CD20 mAb treatment included pre-B, immature, transitional, and some B1 B cells that expressed CD20 at low levels. By contrast, peritoneal cavity B cells expressed normal CD20 densities and were coated with CD20 mAb, but only 30-43% of B1 cells and 43-78% of B2 cells were depleted by day 7. Spleen B cells adoptively transferred into the peritoneal cavity were similarly resistant to mAb-induced depletion, while transferred B cells that had migrated to the spleen were depleted. However, peritoneal B1 and B2 cells were effectively depleted in mAb-treated wild-type and C3-deficient mice by thioglycolate-induced monocyte migration into this otherwise privileged niche. Inflammation-elicited effector cells did not promote peritoneal cavity B cell depletion in FcR-deficient mice treated with CD20 mAb. Thus, the majority of CD20(+) cells and B cell subsets within lymphoid tissues and the peritoneum could be depleted efficiently in vivo through Fc-dependent, but C-independent pathways during anti-CD20 immunotherapy.

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Published In

J Immunol

DOI

ISSN

0022-1767

Publication Date

April 1, 2005

Volume

174

Issue

7

Start / End Page

4389 / 4399

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Receptors, Fc
  • Peritoneal Cavity
  • Mice, Knockout
  • Mice
  • Lymphocyte Depletion
  • Kinetics
  • Immunotherapy
  • Immunology
  • Complement C3
  • B-Lymphocytes
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Hamaguchi, Y., Uchida, J., Cain, D. W., Venturi, G. M., Poe, J. C., Haas, K. M., & Tedder, T. F. (2005). The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice. J Immunol, 174(7), 4389–4399. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.174.7.4389
Hamaguchi, Yasuhito, Junji Uchida, Derek W. Cain, Guglielmo M. Venturi, Jonathan C. Poe, Karen M. Haas, and Thomas F. Tedder. “The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice.J Immunol 174, no. 7 (April 1, 2005): 4389–99. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.174.7.4389.
Hamaguchi Y, Uchida J, Cain DW, Venturi GM, Poe JC, Haas KM, et al. The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice. J Immunol. 2005 Apr 1;174(7):4389–99.
Hamaguchi, Yasuhito, et al. “The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice.J Immunol, vol. 174, no. 7, Apr. 2005, pp. 4389–99. Pubmed, doi:10.4049/jimmunol.174.7.4389.
Hamaguchi Y, Uchida J, Cain DW, Venturi GM, Poe JC, Haas KM, Tedder TF. The peritoneal cavity provides a protective niche for B1 and conventional B lymphocytes during anti-CD20 immunotherapy in mice. J Immunol. 2005 Apr 1;174(7):4389–4399.

Published In

J Immunol

DOI

ISSN

0022-1767

Publication Date

April 1, 2005

Volume

174

Issue

7

Start / End Page

4389 / 4399

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Receptors, Fc
  • Peritoneal Cavity
  • Mice, Knockout
  • Mice
  • Lymphocyte Depletion
  • Kinetics
  • Immunotherapy
  • Immunology
  • Complement C3
  • B-Lymphocytes