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Showing papers by "Michael W. White published in 1991"


Journal Article
TL;DR: The way in which B cells are activated may influence their surface phenotype and possibly subsequent migration or cell-cell interactions.
Abstract: Antibodies to surface Ig or to the B cell marker CD20 trigger resting human B cells in similar yet distinct ways Either antibody induces five-fold increases in the expression of the protooncogene, c-myc, as detected with semi-quantitative Northern blot assays The induction of c-myc mRNA by anti-IgM or anti-CD20 is blocked by inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC) such as staurosporine and by pretreatment of B cells with phorbol esters to reduce cellular PKC levels This suggests that PKC is involved in the pathways stimulated by both anti-IgM and anti-CD20 However, anti-CD20, unlike anti-IgM, does not activate significant increases in inositol triphosphate or intracellular-free calcium Further, anti-CD20-triggered elevation of c-myc mRNA is inhibited by pertussis and cholera toxins, whereas the pathway initiated by anti-IgM if anything is stimulated by pertussis toxin and unchanged by cholera toxin Further differences in the nature of these two signals were seen when the expression of adhesion/recognition molecules were examined Anti-IgM consistently induces increased expression of the adhesion molecules CD54 (I-CAM-1) and B7/BB-1 on B cells, but anti-CD20 does not Yet both anti-CD20 and anti-IgM increase class II MHC, CD18 (LFA-1 beta-chain) and LFA-3 levels These data suggest that the way in which B cells are activated may influence their surface phenotype and possibly subsequent migration or cell-cell interactions

30 citations