Jego G, Robillard N, Puthier D, Amiot M, Accard F, Pineau D, Harousseau J L, Bataille R, Pellat-Deceunynck C
INSERM U463, Laboratoire Central d'Hématologie, Institut de Biologie, Service d'Hématologie Clinique, Hôtel-Dieu, Nantes, France.
Blood. 1999 Jul 15;94(2):701-12.
Circulating plasma cells in 10 cases of reactive plasmacytosis had a shared phenotype with early plasma cell (CD19(+) CD38(+) CD138(+) CD40(+) CD45(+) CD11a+ CD49e- CD56(-)). In most cases, a minor subpopulation of CD28(+) plasma cells was also detected. Reactive plasma cells were highly proliferative, suggesting the presence of circulating progenitors (plasmablasts). After CD138(+) plasma cell removal, highly proliferative CD138(-) plasmablasts differentiated into CD138(+) plasma cells within a few days. This differentiation, which was associated with increased CD38 and decreased HLA-DR expression, was further confirmed by a large increase in intracellular Ig content (associated with Ig secretion) and was concomitant with extensive secretion of interleukin-6 (IL-6). The addition of neutralizing anti-IL-6 and anti-CD126 (IL-6 receptor) monoclonal antibodies totally prevented Ig secretion and cell differentiation by inducing apoptosis of plasmablasts, which indicates that IL-6 is an essential survival factor for plasmablasts. This report provides the first characterization of normal plasmablasts and shows that their phenotype is not exactly that of multiple myeloma cells.