Affiliation:
1. *Division of Allergy and Immunology, Montreal Children’s Hospital, McGill University/Montreal Children’s Hospital Research Institute, and
2. †Meakins Christie Laboratories, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract
AbstractAlthough platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptors have been found on B lymphoblastoid cell lines, the action of PAF on freshly isolated human B cells has not been clearly demonstrated. Using a sensitive semiquantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR, we have found PAF receptor mRNA expressed by tonsillar B lymphocytes, but little in T lymphocytes. Examination of Percoll-fractionated tonsillar B cells indicated that the low density (primarily germinal center cells) and medium density fractions had approximately twofold more PAF receptor mRNA relative to the high density fraction. PAF (10−7 M) stimulated increases in intracellular Ca2+ that were consistently higher in the low and medium density B lymphocytes compared with high density cells. The PAF receptor antagonist Web 2170 inhibited this. Addition of PAF, but not lyso- or enantio-PAF, induced four- to sixfold greater synthesis of IgM and IgG in low and medium density cells compared with unstimulated controls, but had little effect on Ig production by high density cells. To investigate how PAF may influence Ig synthesis, PAF-stimulated B cells were examined for production of the Th2-type cytokines IL-4 and IL-13. PAF induced IL-4 and IL-13 mRNA expression in 17% of CD20+ cells, and IL-4 was detected in cell supernatants after 48–72 h of culture. Together, these data strongly suggest that functional PAF receptors are expressed on B cells in tonsils.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
1 articles.
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