A Madárimmunológiai Kutatócsoport (AIRG) XVII. konferenciájára szeptember 18-20. között került sor a bécsi Állatorvostudományi Egyetemen. A három napos konferencián a résztvevők a madárimmunológia számos területéről mutatták be legújabb tudományos eredményeket, öt tudományos szekcióban: veleszületett immunitás, MHC és az adaptív immunitás, vakcináció és immungenetika, gazda-patogén kölcsönhatások, evolúciós immunológia.
PhD hallgatóink poszter prezentációi a B-sejtek vándorlásával és a nyirokszövet indukciójával kapcsolatos témákat mutattak be.
Soós Ádám „Tenascin-C regulates B-cell migration in developing avian bursa of Fabricius” című poszter előadásáért legjobb poszter díjat kapott.
A poszter prezentációk kivonatai alább olvashatók:
The bursa of Fabricius (BF) is a peculiar lymphoid organ to birds and essential for the amplification and differentiation of B lymphoid progenitors. B-cell precursors develop in two separate compartments of the bursal follicles: the ectodermal medulla and the cortex of mesodermal origin. Although the role of the medulla required for B-cell maturation has been characterized, the molecular composition and function of the ontogenetically later emerging cortical region is not known. In order to characterize the origin and structure of the neglected cortical compartment, molecular analysis of the follicular cortex was performed in combination with cell culture and embryo manipulation techniques. Immunofluorescence staining of adult BF revealed a heterogeneous B-cell population in the follicle cortex with a chB6+/IgM+/CXCR4high outer region and a CXCR4low/dim region directly adjacent to the cortico-medullary border. The cortex is supported by mesenchymal reticular cells, which uniformly produce extracellular matrix (ECM). Detailed characterization of the ECM revealed that tenascin-C (TNC) expression is highly concentrated to the CXCR4low/dim region of the post-hatch follicle cortex and its embryonic expression starts when CXCR4high B-cell precursors forming the cortex accumulate around follicle buds. We hypothesize that TNC regulates B-cell migration in embryonic and adult chicken BF. Using in vitro BF follicle explants, we show that TNC inhibits CXCR4+ B-cell migration. This was confirmed by TNC overexpression, achieved in ovo using Shh-encoding RCAS retrovirus, which resulted in reduction of size and BF follicle formation. These data indicate that exclusion of TNC from the embryonic BF mesenchyme is essential for the homing of CXCR4high B-cell precursors. Complementary expression pattern of TNC and CXCR4 molecules support the model that B-cells have to downregulate CXCR4 to leave the tenascin-high microenvironment of the cortex and colonize the peripheral organs.
The avian bursa of Fabricius (BF) is a primary lymphoid organ, where B-cell development occurs within bursal follicles of epithelial origin. During embryogenesis the epithelial anlage of the BF emerges as a diverticulum of the cloaca surrounded by undifferentiated tail bud mesenchyme. While it is believed that the epithelial-mesenchymal BF primordium provides a selective microenvironment for developing B cells, the initial events inducing lymphoid follicle formation are not fully elucidated. Using wild type and CSF1R-eGFP transgenic chick embryos, we find that separate B cell, macrophage and dendritic cell precursors enter the BF mesenchyme, migrate to the surface epithelium, and colonize the lymphoid follicle buds. Detailed immunocytochemical characterization revealed a novel EIV-E12+ blood-borne cell type, colonizing the surface epithelium of the BF rudiment before the entry of myeloid and lymphoid lineages and this cell type induces follicle bud formation. Using chick-duck chimeras and chick-quail tissue recombination experiments we demonstrate that EIV-E12+ cells represent a transient cell population that are not dendritic or B cells precursors, and they are capable of follicle bud induction in both dendritic cell- and B cell-depleted bursae.