Martin F, Chen X, Kearney J F
Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham 35294-3300, USA.
Int Immunol. 1997 Apr;9(4):493-505. doi: 10.1093/intimm/9.4.493.
The most D-proximal functional VH gene, VH81X, is preferentially expressed in the mouse fetal B cell repertoire; however, it is expressed in few B cells in the adult. To determine when VH81X gene expression affects size and phenotype of particular stages in B cell differentiation, transgenic mice have been developed expressing a germline fetal liver-derived VH81X-mu rearrangement. Comparative analysis of B lymphopoiesis reveals similarities and differences between fetal liver and adult bone marrow which pinpoint developmental stages in mice during which VH81X-expressing B cell progenitors expand or deplete compartment sizes. These include a similar reduction in c-kitR+ and establishment of a predominant CD43low/HSAhigh phenotype within the B220+ CD43+ compartment which is dependent on the association of the transgene with lambda 5. In contrast, the CD43- pre-B and immature B cell compartments are expanded in the fetus but not in the adult. In addition, there are other factors that later disfavor the survival of VH81X-expressing B1 and B2 cells. Thus the failure to detect VH81X-bearing B cells in the adult is the result of a multistep selection process occurring at all stages during B repertoire expansion.