Mature murine B lymphocytes immortalized by Kirsten sarcoma virus

Abstract
Clonal, antigen-specific, functionally responsive cell populations have proved critical for the analysis of the activation and regulation of lymphocytes. Such studies with B lymphocytes, the precursors of antibody-secreting cells, are hampered by the difficulty in generating phenotypically mature, antigen-reactive lines from defined cell populations. One method is to use acutely transforming retroviruses, which can transform B-lineage lymphocytes in vitro. However, Abelson murine leukaemia virus (A-MuLV) infection of murine bone marrow cells in vitro yields mostly immature B-cell lines, and infection of murine bone marrow cells with murine sarcoma viruses carrying ras related genes produces only immature lymphoid cell lines. Retroviruses which contain ras can immortalize nonlymphoid cells without causing loss of mature phenotypic characteristics. We used ras-containing Kirsten sarcoma virus (KiSV) pseudotyped with an amphotropic MuLV helper virus, to infect a purified population of mature, hapten-binding murine splenic B lymphocytes, aiming to generate mature B-cell lines to use as models for the study of B-cell growth and differentiation physiology. Immortalized B-cell lines which retain the same mature phenotype as the starting population, including hapten-specific binding, were produced. This is the first demonstration of a method for immortalizing selected antigen-binding B lymphocytes, and the first example of immortalization of mature B cells in vitro with an acutely transforming ras-containing retrovirus.