In this issue of Blood, Covens et al revisit the contentious area of human B1 cells and provide evidence that human CD20+CD27+CD43+ cells are preplasmablasts, rather than committed to the B1 lineage.1 

It is well-established that 2 populations of B cells—B1 and B2—exist in mice. Decades of research have demonstrated that these subsets can be distinguished from one another according to phenotype, ontogeny, anatomical location, and function.2-4  Thus, B2 cells are continually generated from bone marrow precursors and circulate throughout the blood and secondary lymphoid tissues. Follicular and marginal zone B cells both arise from the B2 lineage and can respond to a broad range of T-dependent (TD) and T-independent antigens. B2 cells can undergo class switching, somatic hypermutation, and generate memory cells, thereby potentially providing long-lived antibody-mediated protection against many structurally diverse pathogens.3,4 

B1 cells, on the other hand, predominate during fetal and neonatal development, self-renew following their generation from stem cells present at these early stages of life, and predominantly localize to peritoneal and pleural cavities.2-4  B1 cells are considered innate immune cells that produce the majority of “natural” immunoglobulin M (IgM) and IgA, which is largely encoded by germline immunoglobulin genes. Because of its polyreactivity and ability to recognize large repetitive structures, this natural IgM acts as a first line of defense against pathogens such as encapsulated polysaccharide-expressing bacteria.3,4  Subsets of B1 cells also exist that can be delineated by differential expression of CD5.3  These subsets are also functionally distinct, with CD5+ B1a cells producing broadly reactive natural IgM, whereas CD5 B1b cells can generate T-independent, long-lasting memory-type IgM responses to some infectious pathogens. These distinctions between B1 and B2 cells led the Herzenbergs to presciently propose that the immune system develops in “layers,” such that B cells appearing early in ontogeny (ie, B1) provide low-affinity IgM-mediated polyreactive humoral immunity against a broad spectrum of infections, whereas B cells generated later in life (ie, B2) generate high-affinity, monospecific class–switched immunoglobulin that provides long-lived serological memory.2 

Despite there being general consensus regarding the distinct origins and functions of B1 and B2 cells, B1 cells have suffered an identity crisis. Debate has raged as to whether B1 cells represent a distinct B-cell lineage or correspond to a stage of activation that all B cells experience.2-4  This has not been helped by the ambiguities associated with identifying B1 cells in humans that have arisen from logistical difficulties in isolating B cells from peritoneal and pleural cavities of humans at all, let alone healthy individuals, and the assumption that human B cells expressing CD5—such as those in cord blood—are the counterpart to murine B1 cells.4 

A recent study concluded that human B1 cells can be identified and resolved from other human B-cell subsets by a distinct surface phenotype, specifically CD20+CD27+CD43+. These cells, comprising ∼5% to 10% of B cells in cord or adult blood, were defined as B1 cells based on shared key features with murine B1 cells: the ability to spontaneously secrete IgM, to induce proliferation of allogeneic T cells, and to exhibit tonic signaling in the absence of direct B-cell receptor engagement.5  The population of human “B1” cells consisted of both CD5 and CD5+ subsets, with the CD5 subset preferentially producing antibody against polysaccharide antigens.5,6  Although such a discovery may have been expected to be welcomed by human B-cell biologists, in keeping with the historical controversies that have dogged murine B1 cells, the veracity of this initial study has been vigorously debated.7,8  For example, an alternative explanation for some of these data was that human CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells actually correspond to plasmablast-type cells.8 

This possibility has now been addressed.1  By employing a phenotypic, functional, gene-profiling, and in vitro culture approach, it was concluded that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells are more likely to correspond to activated B2 cells undergoing the early stages of commitment to the plasma cell lineage—and thus are termed preplasmablasts—rather than belonging to a distinct B-cell lineage (that of B1 cells). Direct evidence for this was that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells spontaneously secreted IgM, IgG, and IgA, including IgG specific for the TD immunogen tetanus toxoid following booster vaccination, and that gene expression profiling revealed them to be more similar to plasmablasts than naive or memory B cells.1  If CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells were exclusively B1 cells, they would not be predicted to produce class-switched immunoglobulin nor to elicit enhanced recall responses following booster immunization with TD antigen (ie, tetanus).2-4  The concept that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells are preplasmablasts is also consistent with these cells exhibiting additional features of plasma cells, such as a CD38hiCD20lo phenotype,7,8  and greater expression of PRDM1 (encoding the transcription factor Blimp-1) and BCMA1  compared with naive and memory B-cell subsets. Additional evidence that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells may not be B1 cells is that cells with this phenotype could be generated in vitro following stimulation of memory cell precursors, and that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells themselves could undergo further differentiation in vitro, acquiring a phenotype consistent with plasma cells.

Do these findings definitively resolve the uncertainty surrounding the nature of human B1 cells? Probably not. An underappreciated finding was that only ∼5% to 10% of CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells spontaneously secreted immunoglobulin in vitro.1,5,6  Although this may reflect limitations of the in vitro assay, it may actually suggest that CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells are a mixed population comprising both preplasmablasts and putative B1 cells. It is also worth noting that murine B1 cells constitutively express low but detectable levels of Blimp-1.9  Thus, the detection of PRDM1 transcripts in human CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells does not necessarily preclude them from being B1-type cells. Furthermore, it was recently reported that serum IgM levels correlated with frequencies of CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells and that these cells are reduced in individuals with common variable immunodeficiency.10  The reduction in IgM in these individuals could reflect the preplasmablast nature of CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells or the ability of B1 cells to constitutively produce IgM. Despite these uncertainties, the current study by Coven et al1  has provided insight into the origins and functions of at least a subset of CD20+CD27+CD43+ B cells. Studies such as these will ensure that discussion, analysis, and debate of human B cells, including putative B1 cells, will continue in earnest for years to come.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author is supported by grants and fellowships awarded by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.

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