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Asymmetric Segregation of Polarized Antigen on B Cell Division Shapes Presentation Capacity
145
Citations
36
References
2012
Year
HistocompatibilityAutoimmune DiseaseCell DivisionAsymmetric SegregationMedicineImmunologyB CellsMolecular BiologyImmunodominanceAntigen ProcessingAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityAffinity MaturationPolarized AntigenCell PolarityCell BiologyB Cell DivisionImmunological Memory
During the activation of humoral immune responses, B cells acquire antigen for subsequent presentation to cognate T cells. Here we show that after mouse B cells accumulate antigen, it is maintained in a polarized distribution for extended periods in vivo. Using high-throughput imaging flow cytometry, we observed that this polarization is preserved during B cell division, promoting asymmetric antigen segregation among progeny. Antigen inheritance correlates with the ability of progeny to activate T cells: Daughter cells receiving larger antigen stores exhibit a prolonged capacity to present antigen, which renders them more effective in competing for T cell help. The generation of progeny with differential capacities for antigen presentation may have implications for somatic hypermutation and class switching during affinity maturation and as B cells commit to effector cell fates.
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