Publication | Closed Access
Germinal Centers without T Cells
294
Citations
42
References
2000
Year
Germinal CentersAdaptive Immune SystemHumoral ResponseImmunologyImmunologic MechanismT CellsCellular PhysiologyCell InteractionAffinity MaturationCell SignalingImmunological MemoryAb AffinityCell DivisionMorphogenesisAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityCell BiologyGerm CellCellular StructureCellular Immune ResponseMedicineViral Immunity
Germinal centers are critical for affinity maturation of antibody (Ab) responses. This process allows the production of high-efficiency neutralizing Ab that protects against virus infection and bacterial exotoxins. In germinal centers, responding B cells selectively mutate the genes that encode their receptors for antigen. This process can change Ab affinity and specificity. The mutated cells that produce high-affinity Ab are selected to become Ab-forming or memory B cells, whereas cells that have lost affinity or acquired autoreactivity are eliminated. Normally, T cells are critical for germinal center formation and subsequent B cell selection. Both processes involve engagement of CD40 on B cells by T cells. This report describes how high-affinity B cells can be induced to form large germinal centers in response to (4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl) acetyl (NP)-Ficoll in the absence of T cells or signaling through CD40 or CD28. This requires extensive cross-linking of the B cell receptors, and a frequency of antigen-specific B cells of at least 1 in 1,000. These germinal centers abort dramatically at the time when mutated high-affinity B cells are normally selected by T cells. Thus, there is a fail-safe mechanism against autoreactivity, even in the event of thymus-independent germinal center formation.
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