Integrated Department of Immunology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, CO, USA.
Immunol Res. 2013 Mar;55(1-3):277-86. doi: 10.1007/s12026-012-8372-9.
B lymphocytes are often considered a homogenous population. However, B cells in both mouse and humans are comprised of distinct subpopulations that differ in development, phenotype, function, and microenvironmental niches. Much of our understanding about how these different B-cells populations mount antibody responses has been derived from experimental findings in mouse models and based on the use of model antigens. These reductionist studies performed over decades have been invaluable in defining the parameters of the B-cell antibody response to different types of antigens. However, these antigens also are now known to differ in a significant manner from bona fide physiological pathogens, and precisely how these different B-cell subsets divide labor in the primary humoral immune defense of pathogens is less well understood. While there are no absolutes in this area, there are recurring themes that divide the roles of B-cell subsets to different arms of the antibody response. This review provides an overview of rules that govern the B-cell labor roles, exceptions that break these rules, and models that have been used to define them.
B 淋巴细胞通常被认为是同质群体。然而,无论是在小鼠还是人类中,B 细胞都由不同的亚群组成,这些亚群在发育、表型、功能和微环境龛位上存在差异。我们对这些不同 B 细胞群体如何产生抗体反应的理解很大程度上源于在小鼠模型中的实验发现,并基于对模型抗原的使用。这些数十年来进行的简化研究在确定 B 细胞对不同类型抗原的抗体反应参数方面具有不可估量的价值。然而,这些抗原现在也被认为与真正的生理病原体有显著差异,而这些不同的 B 细胞亚群在病原体的初级体液免疫防御中如何分工,我们的了解还不够深入。虽然在这一领域没有绝对的规则,但有一些反复出现的主题将 B 细胞亚群的作用划分到抗体反应的不同分支中。本综述提供了支配 B 细胞劳动角色的规则概述、打破这些规则的例外情况以及用于定义这些规则的模型。