Follicular T-helper cell recruitment governed by bystander B cells and ICOS-driven motility
Author(s) -
Heping Xu,
Xuanying Li,
Dan Liú,
Jianfu Li,
Xu Zhang,
Xin Chen,
Shiyue Hou,
LiXia Peng,
Chi Xu,
Wanli Liu,
Lianfeng Zhang,
Hai Qi
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature12058
Subject(s) - germinal center , cd40 , microbiology and biotechnology , cxcr5 , b cell , cd28 , follicular dendritic cells , antigen , biology , antibody , t cell , memory b cell , naive b cell , antigen presenting cell , immunology , chemistry , cytotoxic t cell , immune system , in vitro , genetics
Germinal centres support antibody affinity maturation and memory formation. Follicular T-helper cells promote proliferation and differentiation of antigen-specific B cells inside the follicle. A genetic deficiency in the inducible co-stimulator (ICOS), a classic CD28 family co-stimulatory molecule highly expressed by follicular T-helper cells, causes profound germinal centre defects, leading to the view that ICOS specifically co-stimulates the follicular T-helper cell differentiation program. Here we show that ICOS directly controls follicular recruitment of activated T-helper cells in mice. This effect is independent from ICOS ligand (ICOSL)-mediated co-stimulation provided by antigen-presenting dendritic cells or cognate B cells, and does not rely on Bcl6-mediated programming as an intermediate step. Instead, it requires ICOSL expression by follicular bystander B cells, which do not present cognate antigen to T-helper cells but collectively form an ICOS-engaging field. Dynamic imaging reveals ICOS engagement drives coordinated pseudopod formation and promotes persistent T-cell migration at the border between the T-cell zone and the B-cell follicle in vivo. When follicular bystander B cells cannot express ICOSL, otherwise competent T-helper cells fail to develop into follicular T-helper cells normally, and fail to promote optimal germinal centre responses. These results demonstrate a co-stimulation-independent function of ICOS, uncover a key role for bystander B cells in promoting the development of follicular T-helper cells, and reveal unsuspected sophistication in dynamic T-cell positioning in vivo.
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