An Unexpected Role for Cell Density Rather than IgM in Cell-Surface Display of the Fc Receptor for IgM on Human Lymphocytes

Author:

Woolley Cassandra R.1ORCID,Brinkman Nicholas C.1,Cash Elizabeth D.23ORCID,Chandran Swapna K.2,Mitchell Thomas C.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. *Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY;

2. †Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery & Communicative Disorders, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY; and

3. ‡Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville Health, Louisville, KY

Abstract

Abstract The Fc receptor for IgM, FcMR, is unusual in that it is preferentially expressed by cells of the adaptive immune system. It is, moreover, the only constitutively expressed Fc receptor on human T cells. Efforts to decipher the normal functions of FcMR have been complicated by species-specific expression patterns in lymphocytes from mice (B cells) versus humans (B, NK, and T cells). In human cells, FcMR cell-surface expression has been reported to be low at baseline ex vivo, with one suggested contribution being ligand-induced internalization by serum IgM. Indeed, preincubation overnight in IgM-free culture medium is recommended for studies of FcMR because surface display is increased under these conditions. We investigated FcMR display on human lymphocytes in PBMCs and found that, surprisingly, cell-surface FcMR was unaffected by IgM abundance and was instead downregulated in high–cell density cultures by a yet undefined mechanism. We further found that ex vivo processing of whole blood decreased surface FcMR, supporting the idea that FcMR expression is likely to be greater on circulating lymphocytes than previously appreciated. Collectively, these findings prompt new predictions of where and when FcMR might be available for functional interactions in vivo.

Publisher

The American Association of Immunologists

Subject

Immunology and Allergy,General Medicine,Immunology

Reference29 articles.

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