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The Memory B Cell Subset Responsible for the Secretory IgA Response and Protective Humoral Immunity to Rotavirus Expresses the Intestinal Homing Receptor, Alpha4beta7

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Journal J Immunol
Date 1998 Oct 21
PMID 9780197
Citations 40
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Abstract

Infection of mice with murine rotaviruses induces life-long immunity, characterized by high levels of IgA in the intestine and large numbers of rotavirus (RV)-specific Ab-secreting cells in gut-associated lymphoid tissues. Lymphocyte trafficking into gut-associated lymphoid tissues is mediated by interaction of the alpha4beta7 integrin on lymphocytes with the vascular mucosal addressin cell adhesion molecule-1. To determine whether B cell memory for RV correlates with alpha4beta7 expression, we transferred sorted B220+ phenotypically defined memory (IgD- alpha4beta7(high) and IgD- alpha4beta7-) and naive (IgD+ alpha4beta7+) splenocytes into recombination-activating gene-2 knockout mice (B and T cell-deficient) that were chronically infected with RV. Only mice receiving alpha4beta7(high) memory (IgD-) B cells produced RV-specific IgA in the stool, cleared the virus, and were immune to reinfection. Alpha4beta7(high) (but not alpha4beta7-) memory B cells from donors boosted as much as 7 mo previously also cleared the virus, indicating that alpha4beta7(high) memory B cells maintain long term functional immunity to RV. Although only alpha4beta7(high) memory cells provided mucosal immunity, alpha4beta7- cells from recently boosted donor animals could generate RV-specific serum IgG, but, like naive (IgD+) B cells, were unable to induce viral clearance even 60 days after cell transfer. These data indicate that protective immunity for an intestinal pathogen, RV, resides in memory phenotype B cells expressing the intestinal homing receptor, alpha4beta7.

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