Improving naive B cell isolation by absence of CD45RB glycosylation and CD27 expression in combination with BCR isotype

Jana Koers, Sabrina Pollastro, Simon Tol, Ilse T. G. Niewold, Pauline A. van Schouwenburg, Niek de Vries, Theo Rispens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

In past years ex vivo and in vivo experimental approaches involving human naive B cells have proven fundamental for elucidation of mechanisms promoting B cell differentiation in both health and disease. For such studies, it is paramount that isolation strategies yield a population of bona fide naive B cells, i.e., B cells that are phenotypically and functionally naive, clonally non-expanded, and have non-mutated BCR variable regions. In this study different combinations of common as well as recently identified B cell markers were compared to isolate naive B cells from human peripheral blood. High-throughput BCR sequencing was performed to analyze levels of somatic hypermutation and clonal expansion. Additionally, contamination from mature mutated B cells intrinsic to each cell-sorting strategy was evaluated and how this impacts the purity of obtained populations. Our results show that current naive B cell isolation strategies harbor contamination from non-naive B cells, and use of CD27-IgD+ is adequate but can be improved by including markers for CD45RB glycosylation and IgM. The finetuning of naive B cell classification provided herein will harmonize research lines using naive B cells, and will improve B cell profiling during health and disease, e.g. during diagnosis, treatment, and vaccination strategies.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1630-1639
Number of pages10
JournalEuropean journal of immunology
Volume52
Issue number10
Early online date2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2022

Keywords

  • B cell receptor
  • CD27
  • CD45RB glycosylation
  • Naive B cells
  • somatic hypermutation

Cite this