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    Date Issued2007 (1)2005 (1)AuthorLuzuriaga, Katherine (2)Souza, Tatyana A. (2)
    Stollar, B. David (2)
    Sullivan, John L. (2)Thorley-Lawson, David A. (2)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Pediatrics (2)Program in Molecular Medicine (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordB-Lymphocytes (2)Humans (2)Immunology and Infectious Disease (2)Molecular Sequence Data (2)Mutation (2)View MoreJournalJournal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (1)Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1)

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    Influence of EBV on the peripheral blood memory B cell compartment

    Souza, Tatyana A.; Stollar, B. David; Sullivan, John L.; Luzuriaga, Katherine; Thorley-Lawson, David A. (2007-09-01)
    Peripheral blood memory B cells latently infected with EBV bear somatic mutations and are typically isotype switched consistent with being classical Ag-selected memory B cells. In this work, we performed a comparative analysis of the expressed Ig genes between large sets of EBV-infected and uninfected peripheral blood B cells, isolated from the same infectious mononucleosis patients, to determine whether differences exist that could reveal the influence of EBV on the production and maintenance of these cells. We observed that EBV(+) cells on average accumulated more somatic hypermutations than EBV(-) cells. In addition, they had more replacement mutations and a higher replacement-silent ratio of mutations in their CDRs. We also found that EBV occupies a skewed niche within the memory compartment, due to its exclusion from the CD27(+)IgD(+)IgM(+) subset, but this skewing does not affect the overall structure of the compartment. These results indicate that EBV impacts the mutation and selection process of infected cells but that once they enter memory they cannot be distinguished from uninfected cells by host homeostasis mechanisms.
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    Peripheral B cells latently infected with Epstein-Barr virus display molecular hallmarks of classical antigen-selected memory B cells

    Souza, Tatyana A.; Stollar, B. David; Sullivan, John L.; Luzuriaga, Katherine; Thorley-Lawson, David A. (2005-12-13)
    Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) establishes a lifelong persistent infection within peripheral blood B cells with the surface phenotype of memory cells. To date there is no proof that these cells have the genotype of true germinal-center-derived memory B cells. It is critical to understand the relative contribution of viral mimicry versus antigen signaling to the production of these cells because EBV encodes proteins that can affect the surface phenotype of infected cells and provide both T cell help and B cell receptor signals in the absence of cognate antigen. To address these questions we have developed a technique to identify single EBV-infected cells in the peripheral blood and examine their expressed Ig genes. The genes were all isotype-switched and somatically mutated. Furthermore, the mutations do not cause stop codons and display the pattern expected for antigen-selected memory cells based on their frequency, type, and location within the Ig gene. We conclude that latently infected peripheral blood B cells display the molecular hallmarks of classical antigen-selected memory B cells. Therefore, EBV does not disrupt the normal processing of latently infected cells into memory, and deviations from normal B cell biology are not tolerated in the infected cells. This article provides definitive evidence that EBV in the peripheral blood persists in true memory B cells.
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