Peripheral deletion of self-reactive B cells |
| |
Authors: | D M Russell Z Dembi? G Morahan J F Miller K Bürki D Nemazee |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Center for Immunology and Respiratory Medicine, Denver, Colorado 80206. |
| |
Abstract: | B LYMPHOCYTES are key participants in the immune response because of their specificity, their ability to take up and present antigens to T cells, and their capacity to differentiate into antibody-secreting cells. To limit reactivity to self antigens, autospecific B cells can be functionally inactivated or deleted. Developing B cells that react with membrane antigens expressed in the bone marrow are deleted from the peripheral lymphocyte pool. It is important to ascertain the fate of B cells that recognize membrane autoantigens expressed exclusively on peripheral tissues because B cells in the peripheral lymphoid organs are phenotypically and functionally distinct from bone-marrow B cells. Here we show that in immunoglobulin-transgenic mice, B cells specific for major histocompatibility complex class I antigen can be deleted if they encounter membrane-bound antigen at a post-bone-marrow stage of development. This deletion may be necessary to prevent organ-specific autoimmunity. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|