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    Eur J Immunol. 2008 Dec;38(12):3411-25.

    Resident enteric microbiota and CD8+ T cells shape the abundance of marginal zone B cells.

    Wei B, Su TT, Dalwadi H, Stephan RP, Fujiwara D, Huang TT, Brewer S, Chen L, Arditi M, Borneman J, Rawlings DJ, Braun J.

    Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1732, USA.

    Since enteric microbial composition is a distinctive and stable individual trait, microbial heterogeneity may confer lifelong, non-genetic differences between individuals. Here we report that C57BL/6 mice bearing restricted flora microbiota, a distinct but diverse resident enteric microbial community, are numerically and functionally deficient in marginal zone (MZ) B cells. Surprisingly, MZ B-cell levels are minimally affected by germ-free conditions or null mutations of various TLR signaling molecules. In contrast, MZ B-cell depletion is exquisitely dependent on cytolytic CD8(+) T cells, and includes targeting of a cross-reactive microbial/endogenous MHC class 1B antigen. Thus, members of certain enteric microbial communities link with CD8(+) T cells as a previously unappreciated mechanism that shapes innate immunity dependent on innate-like B cells.

    PMID: 19009526 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 2734463

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