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Developmental Immunology logoLink to Developmental Immunology
. 1992;2(4):249–261. doi: 10.1155/1992/34586

Lineage Switch Macrophages Can Present Antigen

James D Bretz 1, Shu-Chih Chen 1, Diane Redenius 1, Hsun-Lang Chang 1, Walter J Esselman 1, Richard C Schwartz 1,
PMCID: PMC2275870  PMID: 1343095

Abstract

Recent reports of “lineage switching” from a lymphoid to macrophage phenotype have left unresolved the question of whether such cells are functional macrophages or nonfunctional products of differentiation gone awry. This study demonstrates that several “macrophage-like” cell lines derived from v-Ha-ras-transformed pre-B cells have gained the capacity to effectively present antigen in MHC-restricted fashion. Using an assay involving the cocultivation of putative antigen-presenting cells with chicken ovalbumin (cOVA) and a cOVA-specific T-cell hybridoma, “lineage switch” cell lines were found to present antigen as effectively as macrophage-containing peritoneal exudates. Neither the original pre-B-cell precursors nor B-cell lymphomas derived from them present antigen. Thus, we have demonstrated that these “lineage switch” macrophages are capable of antigen presentation, a mature differentiated function. While gaining macrophage characteristics, these cells have also rearranged their kappa light-chain immunoglobulin locus, suggesting that macrophage differentiation and immunoglobulin rearrangement are not mutually exclusive processes. The existence of both lymphoid and myeloid characteristics in a cell fully capable of antigen presentation suggests greater plasticity in hematopoietic lineage commitment than conventionally thought to be the case.

Keywords: Lineage switch, macrophage, antigen presentation

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