Human Long-lived Plasma Cell Survival and the Role of the Bone Marrow Microniche

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P01 · $384,925 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT ABSTRACT Project 3: Human Long-lived Plasma Cell Survival and the Role of the BM Microniche. Long-lived plasma cells (LLPC) sustain protective antibody production for a lifetime and require the bone marrow microniche to sustain survival. In our lab, we have definitively linked the long-lived viral serum antibody source to the LLPC cellular compartment within the human bone marrow (BM) (CD19-CD38hiCD138+) and developed in vitro BM microniche cultures that mimics the BM microenvironment to sustain PC survival. In this application, we will study the role of the BM microniche on LLPC generation and maintenance by (1) understanding the transcriptional and epigenetic regulation of BM LLPC, (2) understanding the LLPC fate determinants especially the BM adaptation to a hypoxic BM microenvironment and (3) elucidating the essential LLPC survival factors provided by the BM microniche. The significance of this work will be to understand the role of the BM microniche in LLPC survival for life-long antibody protection.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9930040
Project number
5P01AI125180-05
Recipient
EMORY UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Frances Eun-Hyung Lee
Activity code
P01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$384,925
Award type
5
Project period
2016-06-25 → 2022-05-11