The changing preference of T and B cells for partners as T-dependent antibody responses develop.


Autoria(s): MacLennan I.C.; Gulbranson-Judge A.; Toellner K.M.; Casamayor-Palleja M.; Chan E.; Sze D.M.; Luther S.A.; Orbea H.A.
Data(s)

1997

Resumo

Recirculating virgin CD4+ T cells spend their life migrating between the T zones of secondary lymphoid tissues where they screen the surface of interdigitating dendritic cells. T-cell priming starts when processed peptides or superantigen associated with class II MHC molecules are recognised. Those primed T cells that remain within the lymphoid tissue move to the outer T zone, where they interact with B cells that have taken up and processed antigen. Cognate interaction between these cells initiates immunoglobulin (Ig) class switch-recombination and proliferation of both B and T cells; much of this growth occurs outside the T zones B cells migrate to follicles, where they form germinal centres, and to extrafollicular sites of B-cell growth, where they differentiate into mainly short-lived plasma cells. T cells do not move to the extrafollicular foci, but to the follicles; there they proliferate and are subsequently involved in the selection of B cells that have mutated their Ig variable-region genes. During primary antibody responses T-cell proliferation in follicles produces many times the peak number of T cells found in that site: a substantial proportion of the CD4+ memory T-cell pool may originate from growth in follicles.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_280735E24952

isbn:0105-2896

pmid:9176699

doi:10.1111/j.1600-065X.1997.tb00958.x

isiid:A1997WY22100005

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Immunological reviews, vol. 156, pp. 53-66

Palavras-Chave #Animals; Antibody Formation; B-Lymphocytes; Cell Movement; Dendritic Cells; Humans; Lymphocyte Activation; Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell; T-Lymphocytes
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article